logo
Competition is toughening, but will it be enough for Qantas to lift its game?

Competition is toughening, but will it be enough for Qantas to lift its game?

The Age09-05-2025

In this way, the 'healing hand of the market' may have an effect, he said.
Qantas chief executive Vanessa Hudson, speaking during the company's half-year results in February, said: 'We always said that we welcome competition … Our focus is about looking after our customers. We feel really confident in being able to compete.'
Six months before Qatar's entry into the market was given final approval, the government released its long-awaited Aviation White Paper to address broader industry concerns.
The White Paper calls for legislation to create an Aviation Industry Ombuds Scheme, with the 'power to direct airlines and airports to provide remedies to consumers'. It also includes a proposal for a new Aviation Customer Rights Charter.
A spokeswoman for Minister for Infrastructure and Transport Catherine King said: 'The Albanese Labor government has introduced the most comprehensive reforms to the aviation sector in 25 years.'
Yet even before the White Paper's release, the prospect for domestic competition dimmed, with significant changes for two smaller players in 2024: Rex, for 'regional express', went into administration in July and stopped flying to capital cities, while Bonza went out of business in April.
The Albanese government, which had acquired $50 million in debt from Rex in January, said it would step in to ensure regional flights continue to fly while it seeks a new buyer.
With Rex out of the picture, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission found real average fare revenue per passenger had increased by about 3 percentage points to 13.6 per cent in the second half of 2024 following 'the loss of competition from Rex's exit on these routes '.
By the end of the year, Virgin Australia, Qantas and the Qantas-owned Jetstar controlled a combined 98.6 per cent of the domestic market.
On-time arrivals for all airlines averaged 80.2 per cent in March, a fall from the long-term average of 80.7 per cent, according to Bureau of Infrastructure and Transport Research Economics numbers. On-time departures averaged 80.7 per cent, down from an average of 81.8 per cent, although airlines blamed the impact of Cyclone Alfred in Queensland.
Consumer advocate Adam Glezer of Consumer Champion says that, in this climate, the pace of reform is too slow.
'There is no momentum in terms of anything meaningful,' he said.
'By preparing the Aviation White Paper, it appears that the government is trying to appease the public by saying, 'we are putting you first', while they're effectively doing nothing.'
While the government and regulators can set the conditions for the industry, the market would be needed to produce competitive dynamics. That likely means a third or even fourth domestic airline would be necessary.
University of Sydney's Merkert says that if a new, viable domestic carrier did emerge, it would need to profitable, so it would need access to the domestic premium market of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne, which is a 'golden triangle' of profitability.
'The real margins are made domestically, and especially on that sector,' he said.
For now, Merkert says Qantas and Virgin are 'showing capacity discipline' on the capital city routes, ensuring that they don't compete to the point of undercutting their own profits.
'They have almost an informal agreement to be quite happy as what we would call a 'duopoly' because that allows both of them to generate very healthy revenues and profit margins.'
Ahead of an expected ASX relisting, Virgin has swung to profit. The company's earnings before interest and tax rose to $519.4 million in 2024, up 18 per cent from $439.4 million in 2023, on growing demand from premium leisure and corporate travellers as well as budget-passengers.
Qantas posted an 11 per cent increase in pre-tax profit of $1.4 billion in the half-year to December and flagged a domestic fleet refresh of plane interiors. It's also adding new Airbus A321XLRs.
The Coalition, for its part, has been less impressed by the state of the air travel industry.
Before the May 3 federal election, in which voters resoundingly backed the Labor government of Anthony Albanese, Shadow Infrastructure and Transport Minister Senator Bridget McKenzie said that 'under Labor, aviation competition has nosedived'.
In April, McKenzie proposed the creation of a two-year trial that would allow international airlines flying into Darwin to carry domestic passengers between that city and other Australian capitals, a process known as cabotage.
Slot machinations
There are other obstacles for more robust domestic competition. Capacity constraints at Sydney Airport are also to blame, Merkert says. With its limited number of 'slots' – the time allotments for the use of the 'airport infrastructure necessary to arrive or depart ' – as well as the airport's curfew, Sydney airport constraints can hold back capacity across the 'golden triangle'.
Sydney's airport, restricted to 80 aircraft movements an hour, has not had ' flexibility to respond to delays caused by disruptions like bad weather'.
Merkert says a potential competitor to Qantas or Virgin would need a set of two slots in Sydney, one for the morning and one for the evening, for business and premium customers wanting commuter service. Nearly one-third of Sydney's total slot pool is reportedly available to new entrants, but with only one in 10 slots available in peak periods.
'You need to have two slots each day and that is getting increasingly difficult, if not impossible,' Merkert says.
Sydney Airport chief Scott Charlton said: 'There's been good progress in the last six months on reforms at Sydney Airport, including a new slot co-ordinator and an audit of slot use.'
The airport is also implementing a 'recovery period', which will allow airlines access to more slots following weather disruptions, he said.
In April, Airport Coordination – a UK-based outfit with a vast international client base – took over Sydney's slot management from the government-formed Airport Coordination Australia, pledging more transparency on slot usage, on which it says it will publish regular data.
A spokeswoman for minister King said: 'We've passed legislation to reform the slot system at Sydney Airport, boosting competition and levelling the playing field for new entrants.'
With the market power effectively held by two airline groups (Qantas owns Jetstar), domestic airlines face few financial or regulatory consequences for shifting or cancelling scheduled flights. Customer advocates say a customer rights charter upheld by an ombuds scheme would need the power to force airlines to pay compensation.
To that end, Nationals Senator Bridget McKenzie last year sponsored a 'pay on delay' bill, which would put explicit penalties on airlines for delaying or cancelling flights for commercial reasons. The bill remains before the Senate.
Enshrining customers' rights to get a refund for delayed and cancelled flights is a path already blazed by the European Union, which has had such legislation since 2005, and more recently the US, which under the Joe Biden administration instituted a rule change that entitled passengers to a refund 'if their flight is cancelled or significantly changed'.
Peter Forsyth, aviation consultant and former professor of economics at Monash University, says if such a compensation scheme were imposed in Australia, 'there's a question about who pays for it. My guess is that much of the cost would go to the passenger ultimately.'
But how much would that cost be? In Europe, the additional cost per passenger resulting from its compensation scheme was estimated in 2022 to be between US60¢ and $US1.20 (94¢ to $1.87), according to passenger advocacy business AirHelp.
Would the threat of a compensation scheme force airlines to lift their game? It's not clear.
University of Maryland researcher Jingyi Xing found that the EU customer compensation scheme legislation called EC261, introduced in 2005, reduced the proportion of flights delayed for more than three hours. But it also led to a fall in the share of flights with delays up to 15 minutes, or those arriving early.
The 'EC261 does not improve the overall on-time performance of flights,' Xing said.
Loading
'A compensation policy like this affects not only consumer welfare but also competition among firms,' she said.
'Because all carriers are subject to the same compensation scheme, low-cost carriers may be placed at a disadvantage relative to legacy carriers as they charge cheaper prices and have lower revenues,' she said.
That means one fallout of such a scheme could be a further shake-out of low-cost carriers on certain routes. 'This could ultimately lead to higher prices and harm to consumers,' she says.
Given the situation in Australia, with two companies providing almost all domestic flights, it's hard to imagine a further reduction in airline choice.
Glezer, who for a fee helps customers claw back money from businesses, said: 'COVID … should have been a wake-up call for the government to implement change for the Australian flying public.
'How anyone can say Australians should not be entitled to a full refund for all flight cancellations is mind-boggling.
'The fact that the government hasn't implemented this shows their disregard for the consumer.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Labor left with ‘no choice' but to force super tax after weak GDP figures in March, shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien declares
Labor left with ‘no choice' but to force super tax after weak GDP figures in March, shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien declares

Sky News AU

timean hour ago

  • Sky News AU

Labor left with ‘no choice' but to force super tax after weak GDP figures in March, shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien declares

Labor has been left with 'no choice' but to go after citizens' earnings with its proposed super tax as slow growth plagues the nation and hurts tax revenue, shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien has declared. Join to watch the full interview with Ted O'Brien on Business Weekend at 11am (AEST). The Albanese government's proposal to double the tax rate on funds in super balances above $3m and target unrealised gains could soon be legislated as the Greens' approval is all the bill needs to go through the Senate. It comes as recent GDP figures showed Australia was headed back towards per capita recession territory with growth slumping to just 0.2 per cent in the March quarter. The super tax proposal has faced fierce backlash from the Opposition, economists and leaders in the business community. Mr O'Brien is among those and tore into the Albanese government's fiscal management on Sky News' Business Weekend. 'The only reason they're doing it is they've lost all discipline on fiscal responsibility,' the shadow treasurer said. 'Debt (and) deficits (are) going out of control and they've got no ambition for the Australian economy.' He criticised Treasurer Jim Chalmers who lauded the 0.2 per cent growth, arguing the uncertainty from Donald Trump's trade war meant any growth was a decent outcome. 'We heard it last week from the Treasurer after the national accounts came out. What, 0.2 per cent growth in the quarter? Seriously? Lower than last time!' Mr O'Brien said. 'At a yearly basis it's running at less than half of the long-run average of growth and the Treasurer is happy about that. '(There is) no ambition for growth of the Australian economy and when you have no ambition and you overspend, you have no choice but to go after the earnings, the money of your own citizens. 'That's what this super tax does.' Labor's plan to tax unrealised capital gains has drawn backlash from Aussies concerned about small businesses, farmers and startups as many put assets in their self-managed super funds or use it as a low tax investment vehicle. Wilson Asset Management founder Geoff Wilson said by forcing Aussies to pay taxes on paper gains it will hinder investment in Australia. 'Both Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers - and probably most of the government - are gaslighting the Australian people by saying: 'Look, this will only impact a very small percentage of people that pay the additional tax',' Mr Wilson told Sky News. 'That's correct, but what it'll do is actually impact about how $4.2 trillion in superannuation is invested. 'We anticipate that the money will come out of self-managed super funds (SMSF), which is about $1.1 trillion, and billions of that will go into the housing market and push house prices up . ' He cautioned Aussies who use their SMSF as a low tax investment vehicle will be discouraged from funding projects and businesses in the Australian market. 'People won't want to take risk on their superannuation in the self-managed super funds,' Mr Wilson said. 'The angel investors and the startups and the small companies in Australia that find it hard to raise capital, particularly at this point in time - that tap's going to be turned off.'

‘We should not take a backwards step': Littleproud on Australian biosecurity laws
‘We should not take a backwards step': Littleproud on Australian biosecurity laws

Herald Sun

time16 hours ago

  • Herald Sun

‘We should not take a backwards step': Littleproud on Australian biosecurity laws

The National Party says Australia's biosecurity should not be used as a bargaining tool for the removal of US tariffs. The Albanese Government is reportedly considering amending rules, making it easier for the US to export beef to Australia, as long as it can be done safely. Last year, Australia sent almost 400,000 tonnes of beef to America, worth more than $4 billion. Nationals Leader David Littleproud says "we should not take a backwards step and concede biosecurity protocols that are protecting the agricultural industry".

‘Whitlam-esque': Zoe McKenzie blasts Labor's divisive tax hike on super accounts, slams Tasmanian opposition for triggering early election
‘Whitlam-esque': Zoe McKenzie blasts Labor's divisive tax hike on super accounts, slams Tasmanian opposition for triggering early election

Sky News AU

time17 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

‘Whitlam-esque': Zoe McKenzie blasts Labor's divisive tax hike on super accounts, slams Tasmanian opposition for triggering early election

Victorian Liberal MP Zoe McKenzie has lambasted Labor for continuing to advance its plan to hike taxes on superannuation accounts and impose levies on unrealised gains whilst hammering the Tasmanian opposition for sending punters to a winter election. Labor's plan to raise taxes on superannuation accounts over $3 million to 30 per cent and to target unrealised capital gains has sent shockwaves throughout the political and business arena, with financial doyens accusing the government of discarding decades of precedent. The Coalition was previously in talks with the Albanese government to revise certain elements of the legislation, chiefly the concept of taxing unrealised gains, however shadow Treasurer Ted O'Brien officially confirmed on Thursday the LNP would oppose the bill. Yet, former Reserve Bank board members Donald McGauchie and Roger Corbett, in addition to a litany of major Liberal Party donors, have pressed the Coalition to remain at the negotiating table and to secure what it deems crucial exemptions for illiquid assets including farms and small businesses. Ms McKenzie, an outspoken moderate who holds one of the Liberal's last outer-suburban seats, railed against the policy, but did not address if the Coalition would resume talks with Labor to modify the legislation. 'I think this is a terrible piece of policy and a terrible precedent for the future, Labor is effectively saying that they will tax money in your pocket, and you do not yet have this money,' she told Sky News on Saturday. The Member for Flinders echoed criticism from industry magnates in relation to the controversial concept of taxing unrealised gains, stating, 'you may have it in the future, you may not have it in the future, but you will be taxed on it'. 'You may incur a loss in the figure, and you won't get that tax back and that's the principle that we must fight here, because once it's started, it could go anywhere,' indicating that the tax could be extended to a range of other assets including real estate and stocks. 'This is a devilish tax and should be fought by the Coalition parties most stridently, this government is very good at speaking liberal-light in terms of their economic narrative, but it is utterly Whitlam-esque in terms of its impact on the Australian economy'. While the Coalition has vowed to fight the legislation, the bill is expected to pass both houses of parliament unopposed, with the Greens joining with Labor in the Senate despite lobbying for the policy to be levied on those with super accounts over $2 million. 'The point is they're going after money no one yet has, these are paper profits, these are family businesses, these are farms held in super funds that people may well have to liquidate just to pass a putative profit that may not exist when finally realised in years to come," Ms McKenzie said. 'They will need the Greens support in the Senate and as you know, the Greens are pushing to lower that threshold from three million to two million. So, it gives the Australian people a very clear indication of what might happen when Labor and the Greens run the show for the next three years'. The shadow assistant minister then turned her attention to the ongoing political chaos in Tasmania. Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff lost a no-confidence motion in parliament on Thursday, with the speaker casting the deciding vote, resulting in the state heading to it's second election in as little as 14 months. Ms McKenzie savaged Tasmanian Labor leader Dean Winter for sending the state to a snap winter poll and argued the opposition parties had collectively torpedoed a popularly elected government. 'I think the Tasmanian people would be very disappointed with what's happened this week, basically holding an elected government hostage, so it looks like they will be going back to a mid-winter election. We've all done them and they're horrendous," she said. 'I'm sure the people of Tasmania will not be grateful for being dragged back to the polls so soon after a federal election and indeed just 14 months after a state election." Tasmanians will have to wait until next Tuesday to find out when they will return to the polls, with the parliament scrambling to draft emergency legislation to fund government services of which are due to be tabled on the same day. Independent MPs including Craig Garland have called on the beleaguered Premier to resign, with Mr Rockliff guaranteeing he would not sell off state-owned assets to pay down debt if he won the election, of which served as a key factor in sparking the political row.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store