FREE E-Newsletter
Wings Magazine
Subscribe
  ABOUT US   |   CONTACT US   |   SUBSCRIPTION CENTRE   |   ADVERTISE   |   SITEMAP
MAGAZINE
Current Issue
Past Issues
News Archives
Web Exclusives
Video
Photo Gallery
 
MARKETPLACE
Aviation Books
Job Board
Classifieds
New Products
COMMUNITY
Events
AME Hall of Fame
100th Anniversary
Aviation Quiz
Association News
 
RESOURCES
A-List
E-Newsletter
Links
Sitemap
Careers in Aviation
Publications
Helicopters Magazine Careers in Aviation
Ken Pole Ken Pole: Voodoo Economics
Written by Ken Pole   
Union leader works on his ‘PHD’ while airline CEO polishes his juggling act
Why did Canadian Auto Workers president Buzz Hargrove so strongly resist Air Canada's push for additional concessions? Money. The airline's initial proposal would have left many front-line workers in borderline penury. Yet Air Canada CEO Robert Milton had no choice but to push back as hard as he did. Had negotiations collapsed, Deutsche Bank would have followed Victor Li in search of a better return on investment.

On that note, I choked at Hargrove's disingenuous observation that other investors would readily be found: "The only question is going to be who is going to have the money in it and who is going to be making a pile of money, and what is the price they are going to force on the members of our union and the others who work at the airline." What the union boss conveniently ignored is that airlines also spend piles every day. The only pile I saw here was the ‘higher and deeper’ kind!

Air Canada now has the summer to put its affairs in order. That’ll be no mean feat, considering that its costs include servicing the debt incurred from its merger with Canadian Airlines International. Air Canada reported its last profit, $140 million, in 1999, the year before the merger was completed. It lost $82 million in 2000 despite a huge jump in operating revenues.

Then the industry went into global meltdown in 2001, when Air Canada reported a loss of nearly $1.32 billion, followed by losses of $828 million in 2002 and $1.87 billion last year. That's $4.1 billion in four years – a daily average of some $2.8 million! Some of the red ink results from attempts to fend off the discount carriers, but most of Air Canada's losses have been due to factors beyond its control.

Excluding terrorism and SARS, those factors include soaring fuel costs, which have forced Air Canada to bump fares incrementally. But fuel costs comprise significant federal and provincial taxes, dumped into consolidated revenues to underwrite an array of programs, most of which have nothing to do with aviation. In a sense, those taxes subsidize the majority of Canadians who don't fly – but perhaps it's just payback for the days when general revenues essentially subsidized air travel as Ottawa picked up most of the tab for air navigation services (ANS) and the like.

Then there are the sundry charges levied by local airport authorities (LAAs), perhaps the most egregious being at Toronto/Pearson. New airports are all very nice, but if we want them it should be the users – passengers, freight companies and other aviation-related industries – who pay for them. And don't forget the approximately $250 million in lease payments the LAAs remit annually to Ottawa, which retained ownership of the land when it transferred airport jurisdiction.