Travel Tech: Interests of Air Travel Consumers Continue to be Jeopardized
July 13th, 2015

Recent Carrier Actions Threaten Independent Distribution of Travel for Millions of Consumers; DOJ Opens Investigation into Airline Practices

 
Washington, D.C. – The Travel Technology Association (Travel Tech) issued the following statement after the Department of Justice (DOJ) confirmed it has opened an investigation into alleged anti-competitive actions by airlines and following comments at a recent meeting of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) outlining a potential industry trend toward anti-consumer behaviors:
 
Consumers – whether they are leisure or business travelers – benefit greatly from the ability to search, compare, and book travel via the advanced technology solutions created and deployed by Travel Tech’s diverse membership. Global distribution systems (GDSs), online travel agents (OTAs) and meta and travel research websites have been integral in creating a vibrant 21st century travel marketplace for consumers. We applaud the Department of Justice for its interest in protecting air travel consumers. There is less competition in air travel due to carrier consolidation. As a result, it is more important than ever that consumers continue to have the ability to effectively shop for transparent travel options across suppliers.

Travel technology innovators connect the travel marketplace in ways that benefit the entire travel supply chain, from consumers to suppliers. These benefits are currently being threatened on several fronts:

  • Several airlines have adopted      policies that restrict the availability of fare and schedule information      in the marketplace. Limiting access to airline content through the      independent channel – which provides travelers with the transparency and      choice they demand – negatively impacts consumer welfare. A recent study      on this topic is available at TravelTech.org.
  • Discriminatory surcharges and      fees imposed only on those who choose to book travel via channels other      than with the airlines directly. These actions run counter to the travel      marketplace goals of efficiency, transparency, competition and consumer      choice that have made travel such an important economic engine in the      United States and other countries around the world. It is particularly      important that consumers not be financially penalized for using travel      tools that allow them to comparison shop for airline travel or manage      business travel.  Even if the number of airlines from which to choose      has diminished over time through consolidation, consumers should still be      able to shop in an open, transparent marketplace.
  • Recent statements by airline      executives during a June roundtable discussion hosted by the      International Air Transport Association (IATA). The group of airline CEOs      discussed recent actions by a single airline to implement new      discriminatory surcharges on consumers who choose to book travel through      third-party channels.
  • The events at the Miami IATA      meeting may suggest a coordinated effort by the airlines present – and by      the larger trade group – to promote and potentially collectively impose      the surcharge.  Those events raise serious questions as to whether      the airlines and IATA departed from their obligations to compete, not      coordinate, when it comes to the imposition of fares, fees and surcharges      on their customers.  That the context for those discussions was the      imposition of a fee that by design will make it more expensive for      consumers to compare flights and fares makes the actions of those airlines      and IATA all the more troubling.

During a U.S. Senate hearing on the Delta-Northwest merger in 2008, testimony was given that specifically pointed to independent distribution as a way to maintain competition in a consolidated airline industry:
 
“…Online technologies with amongst the most powerful search engines in the world, run by Orbitz, Travelocity and Expedia, have really created a customer revolution. Customers can now quickly and easily compare the offerings of competing carriers on any given route, and if they so choose they can push the ‘lowest applicable fare’ button and they’re guaranteed to see low prices from the choices that they select.”
 
The Travel Technology Association agrees that independent travel distribution benefits consumers and provides a competitive check with airline-owned channels. Since then, some air carriers have done nothing but work to undermine independent distribution and side-by-side comparison shopping consumers currently enjoy. There is no doubt that eliminating an open, transparent market will harm consumers because it already has. As the DOJ, DOT and Congress look more closely at the state of the airline industry, these and other issues should be considered.
 
ABOUT TRAVEL TECH
The Travel Technology Association is the trade association for the travel technology industry, and is dedicated to promoting public policy that helps connects consumers and travel providers, eliminates barriers to travel, and protects the traveling public.
 
Travel Tech members include: Orbitz, Expedia, Priceline, Sabre, Amadeus, Travelport, Skyscanner, Airbnb, HomeAway, TripAdvisor, CheapOAir, and Vegas.com.
 
Learn more about the Travel Technology Association by visiting us at TravelTech.org and following us on Twitter, @TravelTech.