1st Edition

Deregulation and the Airline Business in Europe Selected readings

By Sean Barrett Copyright 2009
208 Pages
by Routledge

208 Pages
by Routledge

208 Pages
by Routledge

Over the past twenty years air fares in Europe have fallen steadily. New entrant airlines such as Ryanair and Easyjet have become the largest passenger airlines in Europe, old national airlines have become commercialised and staff productivity of airlines and airports now compete. The reason behind these changes was the change in policy from protecting national airlines to market competition.... Read more

Preface; Regulating Europe's Skies 1. The Defeat of Regulatory Capture 2. A Europe of National Airlines 3. Deregulating the Dublin-London Route 4. Ryanair's Market Entry 5. The Sustainability of the Ryanair Model 6. The New Entrant Full-Service Airline 7. Commercialising a National Airline 8. Airport Competition- Low Cost Airlines and Low Cost Airports 9. Regulating and Dismantling a National Airport Monopoly - a Case Study 10. A Sector Transformed

Biography

Sean Barrett is Senior Lecturer in Economics at Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.

'This book greatly enriches the literature on air transport policy.  It is especially valuable by reason of it being penned by someone who has over many years been most influential in debates on policy in his own native country of Ireland.' Pat Hanlon (University of Birmingham, UK)