U.S. Government Must Reform its Policies that Advantage U.S. Airlines’ Competitors
ME NewsWire
WASHINGTON - Monday, November 18th 2013
Today’s
aircraft orders totaling $162.6 Billion by state-owned foreign airlines
Emirates, Etihad Airways, Qatar Airways, and Flydubai, illustrate the
staggering scale of the economic threat to the U.S. airline industry and
its employees if the U.S. government continues policies that hand
foreign competitors an economic advantage over U.S. airlines in the
global marketplace.
So far, the total order during the first day
of the Dubai Airshow includes the purchase of 113 widebody aircraft from
Airbus and 255 from Boeing. “The question of the day is: How many of
these widebody aircraft orders will be financed by a U.S. or European
taxpayer-backed export credit agency, subsidizing the aircraft orders at
rates not available to U.S. airlines,” said Capt. Lee Moak, President
of the Air Line Pilots Association, Int’l (ALPA).
ALPA calls for
the U.S. government to provide U.S. airlines and their workers with a
fair opportunity to compete internationally by ending its policies that
advantage state-owned foreign airlines while harming U.S. airlines. In
Leveling the Playing Field for U.S. Airlines and Their Employees, ALPA
lays out urgently needed U.S. government action, including measures to:
Reform the high tax burden on U.S. airlines while their foreign
competitors often operate in a tax-free business environment at home;
Halt its plan to operate U.S. Customs preclearance facilities in Abu
Dhabi and possibly other airports where U.S. carriers do not fly that
advantages state-owned foreign carriers at the expense of U.S. airlines;
Ensure that U.S. Open Skies agreements acknowledge that high labor
standards for U.S. airline employees are essential to the competitive
landscape;
Eliminate low-interest U.S. Export–Import Bank
financing for widebody aircraft that isn’t available to U.S. airlines
but subsidizes state-owned foreign airlines and saves them millions in
financing costs.
“These state-owned foreign airlines are spending
billions to purchase widebody aircraft so they can increase flights to
and from the United States and unfairly compete against U.S. airlines in
the global marketplace,” said Capt. Moak. “At the same time, the U.S.
Export–Import Bank’s below-market financing allows U.S. airlines’
competitors to save millions when they purchase widebody aircraft like
those announced this week.”
ALPA strongly maintains that growth
in the global airline industry should be driven by fair competition. In
providing low-cost financing to foreign airlines, for example, the U.S.
Export–Import Bank not only saves the state-owned carriers millions on
each aircraft, the financing also enables these airlines to purchase
state-of-the-art aircraft that are more fuel efficient and attractive to
passengers. As a result, U.S. airlines experience a competitive
disadvantage for years if not decades, and the results affect U.S.
airline workers throughout the industry.
“The secretary general
of the Arab Air Carriers Organization had it half-right in an April 2011
speech to the International Aviation Club in which he compared the U.S.
airline industry to dinosaurs that will soon die due to their inability
to adapt to their environment,” continued Capt. Moak. “If U.S. airlines
are to die, it will be due to U.S. government policy and vision that is
stuck in a domestic competitive mindset while we do business in a
global economic environment.”
“If U.S. airlines that fly
internationally don’t grow because their state-owned foreign competitors
benefit from unfair marketplace advantages provided by the U.S.
government, the airlines that fly the domestic passengers who connect to
the international flights won’t grow either,” said First Officer Marcin
Kolodziejczyk, chairman of ALPA’s Mesa Air Group pilot group.
“Skewing
global competition against U.S. airlines threatens an economic engine
that powers the U.S. gross domestic product and creates good jobs,”
concluded Capt. Moak. “U.S. government policies should not disadvantage
U.S. airlines while helping our foreign competitors and it is past time
for U.S. government leaders to take action to create a fair competitive
marketplace for U.S. airlines and their employees.”
Founded in
1931, ALPA is the world’s largest pilot union, representing nearly
50,000 pilots at 32 airlines in the United States and Canada. Visit the
ALPA website at www.alpa.org.
Contacts
ALPA Media, 703-481-4440
Media@alpa.org
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