Wednesday, 8 April 2020

Global recession tactics to fight back COVID19, Here's how it is...


                           

                              

                             The year 2008 was historically remarkable in the global economy due to the severe economic downturn in all domestic & international sectors. The reason behind, in 2008, a series of bank and insurance company failures triggered a financial crisis that effectively halted global credit markets and required unprecedented government intervention. Failure to fluctuate the capital sources in the market resulted in declares a “Global recession” and more public cooperation had filed for bankruptcy especially in US.   

                              The aviation industry contribute to the global economic growth by affecting the lives of numerous household people and is a key employment generator (over 35 million jobs world-wide) and impact positively to the gross domestic product (GDP) of the world economy. During the global recession, airline industry hit massively in terms of passenger travel, aircraft orders, fuel prices, freight, airport expansions & collectively the manpower factor. (Ruchi Goyal & Dhanisha Negi, April2014)


                              To have an explicit idea of what seems to be the consequences COVID19 in the aviation industry, I would like to discuss further in depth of the struggles that airlines face during the severe economic downturn and alternative decisions took place to remain in the business. Looking further the challenges arouse in front of major airlines and how they overcome those challenges and continue to be back in the business and gradually accelerate their potential to be one of the leading airline products.        



The impact on the Aviation Industry

                               There's always a synergy between the global economy and air transportation. In any economic downturn, the air travel industry will become one of the top affected. As per IATA specification, the Asia-Pacific region appears to hit with a loss of 14.5 percent during June 2008 - June 2009 whereas there has been a drop of 4.7 percent and 5.9 percent in Latin America and Africa respectively. Below chart proves that there is a significant shift in demand for air travel between 2008 and 2009 compared to the revenue pax kilometers (RPK) and then there is a persistent rise except between 2010 and 2011 whereas, in air cargo, there is a significant shift in demand between 2008 and mid-2010 and then it has been flat for three years. This fall in demand starts the effect all over the world.  

Chart 1
                                    Furthermore, another record shows the business confidence has grown between ups and downs compare to the revenue pax kilometers (RPK). There has been a significant fall in business confidence in the year 2009 but in recent years the acceleration of air travel following an improvement of business confidence in the economic outlook.


Chart 2

                                   

                                    Another significant damage to the industry is reduced capacities. As we talk about the world’s leading airlines such as KLM, Air France, Lufthansa identifies the situation and reduced their capacities in the summer season in order to face the global recession. In Ireland, Aer Lingus which fought off a second hostile takeover bid from Ryanair, also continues to be loss in the passenger and cargo capacity due to series of failures. Problem identifies by different airlines worldwide and actioned precautionary parameters such as Cathay pacific cut the capacity, grounded flights, delayed construction of the new cargo terminal & offered unpaid leave to staff. Singapore Airlines had to ground 17 aircrafts and offer unpaid leave to their staff. Overall there were 9 companies announce bankruptcy such as Olympic Airlines, Sky Europe, Volareweb and My Air.

                                    Increasing on fuel cost and operating cost is also one of the facts that airlines struggled. As per IATA reports, the global airline industry’s fuel bill has been forecast to total $187 billion in 2008 whereas the net negative profit was 26.1 overall. The below chart highlights the rise in fuel costs of the airline industry has significantly impacted the net profit levels in the same year.


                                                                                 
                                                                                  Chart 3                                                                              

                                                                             Chart 4
                                   
                                   
                       Above chart 4 describes the percentage of fuel impact on operating costs in the global aviation industry.  

The profit is what any industry look in to at the end of the financial year. Unlike the other years, the global airline industry has to accept heavy losses during the year 2008-2009. Cathay pacific being hard-hit and record their biggest loss in the sixty-three-year-old aviation history.

                                   
                                    Most airlines have taken heavy losses and to withstand the crisis had to use various marketing policies of lower prices or promotions in order to diminish losses. The main European companies as Air France-KLM announced a decrease of over 30 % of income because of the cheaper tickets but estimated an annual profit of over 15 %, British Airways adopted a new policy of "flights of survival" by which companies try to provide some incentives to loyal customers and keep them even if the company does not register profit, Lufthansa was also affected by the crisis but perhaps the least of them predicting only a drop of 4.8 % in profit compared to 2008 but despite this, it intends to purchase the SAS, Austrian Airlines and Brussels Airlines which have some financial problems. Some low-cost companies took advantage of the crisis and exploited the bankruptcy of other companies by entering on the opened market or by acquiring traditional customers of line companies through an aggressive promotion policy such as AirBerlin, WizzAir, BlueAir, Ryanair and EasyJet, the last ones have announced an increase of seals of over 20 %. (Marius G. OPREA, May 2010)


                                    Below Chart 5 proves the loss between profit margins and total airline net profits. Focus on 2008 how the world aviation industry suffers losing billions of dollar and by the recovery solutions in 2009 how the industry manages to minimize the loss compare to the profit margins.


Chart 5             
                                    

                                   One of the main cooperate value of any company is employees. The prime objective of any company is to protect their employees in order to maximize and improve the productivity. The image of the company, profitability & growth relies on the productivity of the workforce in the company.

                                    2008, 2009 global recession was strong enough to damage the manpower sector severely and end up creating job cuts where there’s no other solution left with the management of most of the airlines. However, this behavior attributes to many other factors such as outsource staff at lower wages than the official airline representatives, the growing up of low-cost airline trend (to be discussed further) and also technology improvement which results in reducing the number of task on each individual staff. Below list shows an overview of job cut announcements in the European air transport sector selected by Macário in 2009.



Carrier                                              Date of announcement                                      Job cuts

SAS                                                   4 February 2009                                                8,600 out of 23,000
SAS                                                   12 August 2009                                                 Additional 1,500 job cut                     
Virgin Atlantic                                    12 February 2009                                               600 out of 9,000
Ryanair                                              12 February 2009                                               200
Air France/KLM                                 15 April 2009                                                    3,000 out of 100,000
Lufthansa                                           16 July 2009                                                      400 administrative staff
Aeroflot                                              17 September 2009                                            2000 jobs
LOT                                                   6 October 2009                                                  400 out of 3,500
British Airways                                   6 October 2009                                                  1,700 of 14,000 UK crew
Aer Lingus                                         7 October 2009                                                  676 out of 3,900




                                    Moving on with US sector was prominent on cuts off starting from early May 2008 to 2009 jobs were cut at several of the major airlines across the region such as United Airlines (6,600), American Airlines (4,900), Northwest Airlines (4,300), Delta Airlines (3,300), US Airways (1,900), and Continental Airlines (1,500). Alternatively, in the Asia Pacific, the Australian airlines Qantas and Virgin Blue announced 1,750 and 400 job losses, respectively, while Air New Zealand planned to retrench 200 jobs. Besides jobs cut-off, some major airlines reduced working hours and some airlines actioned pay freeze such as British airways & Singapore airlines. Nevertheless, some Asian airlines asked employees to work without any wage and Cathay send 17000 staff on unpaid leave for 4 weeks, japan airlines 16000 staff on two months unpaid leave.





The industrial relations have also seriously deteriorated. Employment relations affect company performance. Good employment relations, as measured by positive workplace culture, seem to result in good quality of service, high levels of labor and aircraft productivity, and contributing to a sustainable industry. Employees play a critical role in improving the productivity of aircrafts and gates and improving customer service and satisfaction. (Ruchi Goyal & Dhanisha Negi, April2014)     


One of the satisfactory outcomes of the global recession is growing up the low-lost career system. Low-cost career a.k.a. no-frills airlines or budget career, a concept starts in 1970 with southwest airline and gradually spread around the world after the US deregulation in 1978 and followed by the European Union in 1990. Basically, it means cheap airfares, on-demand cabin service (on payment basis). The urge of LCC (low-cost career) improved during the recession due to many people not willing to pay high-price on legacy carriers or the priority of the travel requirement. So the option is to book on an LCC flight and fulfill the requirement. This trend creates a positive approach on personnel travel as well as company travel whereas there’s no high demand but very limited, yet the airline carriers maximize to hold and create a link with the companies who keep the airline alive in the business. The statistic proves that during the recession most of the LCC’s standstill without losing heavy, unlike many other major carriers.  
                      


“In a downturn Ryan air growing even more than ever before as everyone gets more price-sensitive” Michael O’Leary



“The low-cost model is most resilient during a downturn because customer sentiments very focus on value” Marty St George



                                    In the recent years, LCCs have taken passengers from full-service
airlines and created new demand in the world economy. They have been able to grab 41 percent share in the European market, 50 percent in Brazil and 70 percent in India. Some of the legacy carriers have also imitated LCCs by cutting their costs
(reducing food service, charging for luggage and entertainment and reconfiguring plane layouts) and boosting productivity. LCCs share of globally available seat capacity is around 25 percent and 15 percent of available seat kilometers (ASK). Some LCCs are venturing into long-haul flights and increasing code-shares. 

                                   
                                   


Many airlines struggle to be active in the business during the worldwide recession whereas only a few airlines tactically use their standby resources such as reserved credit, contingency projects, cost-cutting programs which gave a positive impression to the world. However, the airline lost billions of dollars including the declaration of bankruptcy but many airlines manage to recover from their loss and fewer airlines performed fast recovered and continued higher profit.


Conclusion

                                    According to the current statistics, the COVID19 hit severely on the aviation industry and the global economy at large. The pandemic, yet not at its peak point means that there's more to expect in the coming months. The mindset is "The industry can recover it's legacy gradually after the pandemic over". However, it takes a sequential process to gain the trust of passengers and respond to demands. During the economic slowdown most airlines transformed and started to make airfares more affordable so much so that everyone had a chance to travel cheaply. Still people would try not to travel by air as far as possible, but if there were a need, would try to travel as cheaply as possible. The aviation industry has to evolve and remain relevant to suit these needs of travelers, and in time to come aviation would become even cheaper and have backward and forward integration with airport to end destination travel providers in order to recover from the current economic crisis.


While the global commercial aviation industry has not been immune to the economic crisis, the long–term outlook is definitely good. Forecasts for next 0-15 years foresee 5% Year on year growth in revenues which is twice the growth rate of the global economy as a whole. Growth is expected from maturing economies and Asia. All traffic including business, tourism and freight is expected to rise dramatically with the increase in disposable income in developing countries and maturing of low-cost carriers. Several examples of new practices emerged during the crisis.


AirFrance-KLM announced that the 3,000 job cuts required will be achieved through suspending hiring, not renewing temporary contracts and not replacing retiring members of staff, thereby avoiding redundancies. In the UK, consultation between British Airways and the British Air Line Pilots Association (BALPA), the trade union for pilots in the UK, led to an agreement over a cost reduction package that saved the airline £26million per year. Similarly, Thomson airways cut 5 percent pay for pilots employed at the airline in order to save up to 100 pilot jobs. But above all aviation was seen as a luxury and traveling by air was something only rich could afford earlier. Furthermore, it has been observed that the economic crisis is not solely responsible for the poor performance of the airline industry. Besides economic recovery, professional team and good governance are required to give a push to this sector so that it can contribute significantly to the world economy.



REFERENCES

·       RuchiGoyal (First Author) / DhanishaNegi (Co-author) IRACST – International Journal of Commerce, Business and Management (IJCBM), ISSN: 2319–2828 Vol. 3, No. 2, April 2014.

·       Aviation Strategy issue no 132, Oct2008.

·       GeoJournal of Tourism and Geosites ISSN 2065-0817, E-ISSN 2065-1198 Year III, no. 1, vol. 5, May 2010, pag. 52-61 Article No: 05106-40




Prepared by Ajith Fernando




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