Research and Markets: Competition Versus Predation in Aviation Markets
Posted on: Thursday, 18 August 2005, 09:00 CDT
Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c22835) has announced the addition of Competition versus Predation in Aviation Markets to their offering
Prior to liberalization, there was little scope for predatory behavior in the aviation market. However, following deregulation, new entrants sought to compete with entrenched incumbents. Low-cost carriers (LCCs) gained significant market share, which in turn provoked many different kinds of defensive response. Having put pressure on established carriers, low-cost airlines are themselves feeling the pressure of competition from new operators.
While it is normal and natural for airlines to react to competition - modifying their services, the ways in which they offer them and their prices - when does aggressive commercial behavior go too far and become predation?
This book considers what exactly is meant by predation in the aviation environment, and explores the strategies LCCs adopt in order to gain market share, as well as the strategies of the established airlines in response to competition from new entrants to the market. It also addresses the key question of what competition policy should do to ensure intensive competition.
Competition versus Predation in Aviation Markets brings together contributions from around the world, from airlines, government agencies, leading academics and consultants, providing a wealth of perspectives on a business practice crucial to airline survival.
Topics covered:
- Competition and Predation - Surveys from Different Perspectives: Strategic behavior of incumbents
- Predatory pricing: still a rare occurrence?
- Australia and New Zealand: Predatory behavior in Australian aviation markets
- When does airline competition become predation?
- America: Predation in aviation: the North-American divide
- Airline predation in Canada
- Most low-cost airlines fail(ed): why did Southwest Airlines prosper?
- Europe: The Lufthansa-Germania case at a glance
- Predatory pricing in the airline industry as a challenge to competition law enforcement
- The European No-Frills-aviation market: current and future developments
- Theoretical and Policy Aspects of Predatory Pricing and Competition: A case of beer and pretzels
- Investigating airline manager's perception of route entry barriers: a questionnaire-based approach
- Why do low cost carriers arise and how can they survive the competitive responses of established airlines? A theoretical explanation
- A capacity lock-in rule
- Wide angle preying in land modes? the problem of missing modes
- An economic framework for assessing predation in air services: markets, barriers to entry, market power and tests
For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c22835
Source: Business Wire
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