As U.S troops rushed into Baghdad last month, American
politicians rushed toward a very different objective: Bailing out
the ailing airline industry.
Hard hit by a quartet of calamities -- recession, terrorism, war
and SARS -- airline executives warned of financial catastrophe.
Congress quickly responded with aid worth some $3.1 billion, the
second airline aid package in two years.
But the money will do little to solve the long-term problems of the
airline industry -- and could actually make them worse.
Airline executives' despair was palpable when military action
commenced in Iraq. Passenger levels dropped 10 percent as the war
began, and thanks to SARS, have yet to recover. A flock of major
airlines, led by American, teeter on the edge of bankruptcy.
Even before the first shot was fired, airlines were asking Congress
for help, warning of chaos in air transportation, loss of service,
and even eventual nationalization of the industry. The argument
triggered an almost reflexive political instinct to "do something"
for the industry.
Yet merely propping up the status quo is the one thing that
certainly would hurt airlines and their consumers. Almost all
observers agree this is an industry in need of change -- change in
response to the challenges of the post-9/11 era and to competitive
challenges that pre-date 9/11. The industry needs to deal with the
reality of fewer passengers, and that means cutting excess
capacity.
More fundamentally, the old-line carriers must respond to economic
challenges from low-cost, innovative competitors such as Southwest
and Jet Blue. Such discount lines, once themselves discounted by
the experts, have actually prospered over the past two years,
eating up market share like the 7th Cavalry ate up desert. The
result has been tremendous pressure on the old-line carriers --
independent of Saddam and SARS -- to trim costs, improve systems,
and just get better. Policymakers should cheer this process, not
try to stop it.
This could mean more airline bankruptcies - even with
restructuring, for instance, American isn't yet out of the woods.
But bankruptcy isn't an enemy of consumer welfare. The planes don't
disappear. Instead, the process helps troubled companies continue
operating while they reform (as shown by USAir's re-emergence from
bankruptcy), or to liquidate in an orderly manner.
None of this is news to Washington policy-makers, especially after
they saw the struggle to dispense funds from the 2001 bailout
devolve into an intra-industry food fight. Aware of these
criticisms, airlines began emphasizing the government's role in
their hardship. Specifically, they targeted the $2.50 per flight
segment security fee imposed on passengers to fund the
Transportation Security Administration (TSA). Instead of the broad
support offered in 2001, the bulk of this year's aid consists of
temporary relief from these fees. Why, airlines ask, should they
shoulder the cost of security when most businesses receive police
protection without charge? The fee, they argue, is simply a
tax.
This argument is an appealing one, especially to a Republican
Congress more disposed to tax cuts than to subsidies. Yet it too is
flawed. Most police costs are supported by the general taxpayer
simply because there's no way to attribute the cost. If a policeman
is walking a beat in a city, it's impossible to say who will
benefit at a particular time. Not so for airline travel. Fair or
not (and terrorism is never fair) airline security costs stem from
-- and primarily benefit -- airlines and their passengers. Shifting
those costs to the general taxpayer would simply hide the real
costs of air travel from the consumer, distorting their economic
choices.
But, many argue, isn't the cost of security, as administered by the
TSA, too high? The agency frequently has been criticized for being
wasteful, most recently by the General Accounting Office. Why
should airlines pay for this waste? But the answer isn't to shift
the burden to the general taxpayer -- it is to reduce the waste and
reform the system. Relieving airlines and their passengers of these
fees would only make the cost of waste less visible, and reduce
prospects for reform.
Despite passage of the aid package last month, these issues are
unlikely to go away. The airlines still are troubled, and the
long-term status of security fees is still undecided. But rather
than another panicked aid package, Congress should act now --
starting with a review of TSA -- on real, sensible reforms in air
transportation.
-James L. Gattuso
is a research fellow in regulatory policy at The Heritage
Foundation (www.heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy
research institute.
Distributed nationally on the Knight-Ridder Tribune wire