Thursday, October 4, 2012

CDNs Shopping In US

From Yahoo:
"Canada air policy changes could stem traffic loss to U.S.: report"

The Canadian government and its airlines could make a range of policy changes to slow the tide of 5 million travelers a year that head to the United States for cheaper flights, a think tank report said on Wednesday. Slashing the fees and taxes that account for roughly 40 percent of the difference between Canadian and U.S. air fares would have a significant impact but doing so looks unlikely given tight government budgets, the Conference Board of Canada report said. But there is a long list of more modest policy changes that could lead to lower prices, the report said. "Cross-border air-fare shopping is being driven by a perfect storm of factors that also includes differences in wages, aircraft prices, and industry productivity as well as U.S. aviation policies," said the study's principal research associate, Vijay Gill, in a release. The government could also reduce its trans-border security charge on passengers, so that it matches or falls below the charge for domestic flights. Alternatively, the government could shift the charge directly to airlines, which could then allocate the cost according to demand. Disparities with U.S. aviation policy, which have a major impact on after-tax fares, could also be reduced, the report said On the airline side, carriers could change per-passenger charges to a pool of fees, the paper suggested, allowing the carriers to spread the fees among flights and passengers as they see fit. The study was done at Canada's three busiest airports, in Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal, and at the U.S. airports with which they compete. "The fact that Canada's largest airports are losing traffic to cross-border competitors matters because it undermines their role as national and international hubs," David Stewart-Patterson, the Conference Board's vice president of public policy, said in a statement.
 
^ It would make sense that the Canadian Government would want to have Canadians spend their money in Canada rather than go to the US for better bargains. When I lived in New York and also in New Hampshire you could/can see lots of Canadians buses and license plates at the outlet malls year-round. ^

http://news.yahoo.com/canada-air-policy-changes-could-stem-traffic-loss-110626444--finance

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.