The empirical analysis of the impact of alliances on airline operations.

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dc.contributor.author Alamdari, Fariba en_UK
dc.contributor.author Iatrou, Kostas en_UK
dc.date.accessioned 2005-11-22T13:33:46Z
dc.date.available 2005-11-22T13:33:46Z
dc.date.issued 2005-05 en_UK
dc.identifier.citation Kostas Iatrou and Fariba Alamdari, The empirical analysis of the impact of alliances on airline operations, Journal of Air Transport Management, Volume 11, Issue 3, May 2005, Pages 127-134. en_UK
dc.identifier.issn 0969-6997
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1826/912
dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jairtraman.2004.07.005
dc.description.abstract Airline alliances dominate the air transport industry with the largest carriers belonging to one of the four alliance groupings—Wings,1 Star Alliance, oneworld, SkyTeam—which represent 56% of world revenue passenger kilometers. Although much research has been carried out to evaluate the impact of alliance membership on performance of airlines, little has been done on the perceived impacts by participating airlines. This paper gathers opinions of all the airlines, belonging to the four global alliances in 2002 on the impact alliances have had on their traffic and on their performance in general. To achieve this, a comprehensive survey of the alliance management departments of airlines participating in the alliances was carried out. The survey examined which type of cooperation among carriers (frequent flyer programmes, code share, strategic alliance without antitrust immunity, strategic alliance with antitrust immunity) have produced the most positive impact on traffic and which types of route (short haul, long haul, hub–hub, hub–non-hub, non-hub–non-hub) have been affected the most. In addition, the respondent airlines quantified the effect alliances have had on specific areas of their operation, such as load factors, traffic, costs, revenue and fares. Their responses are analysed by alliance groupings, under airline and under geographic region to establish which group, type of carrier and geographic region has benefited the most. The results show that each of the four global alliances groupings has experienced different results according to the type of collaboration agreed amongst their member airlines. en_UK
dc.format.extent 1947 bytes
dc.format.extent 140113 bytes
dc.format.mimetype text/plain
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language.iso en en_UK
dc.publisher Elsevier en_UK
dc.subject Airline alliances en_UK
dc.subject Passenger traffic en_UK
dc.title The empirical analysis of the impact of alliances on airline operations. en_UK
dc.type Article en_UK


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