
America's airlines are introducing a class below economy
Delta was the first big airline tointroduce basic economy, and it refined it last year as one of itsfive fare classes. Now United and American haveboth announcedthat they will be debuting their versions of basic economy later this year.
From the airlines’ perspective, last class is an effort to compete with the profitability of no-frills competitors such as Spirit and Frontier. Airlines can cut costs by limiting the things to which passengers are entitled. Eliminating upgrades and standby flying for certain passengers reduces administrative overheads. And forcing some passengers into the seats no one else wants could reduce the risk that they will remain vacant.
But some people suspect a more nefarious motive: Delta and its rivals are making basic economy so unpleasant that people will pay extra to "upgrade” to standard economy. Indeed, when you try to book a reservation on Delta’s basic economy,a screen pops upwarning you of all the downsides and requiring you to check a box stating "I agree to the restrictions” before you can proceed.
Press coverage of the new fare class hasn’t been kind.Timecalled it"worse than any low-fare carrier option”.Forbeswarnedthat passengers "may soon be crying foul”. A writer for theStar Tribuneof Minneapoliscomplained, "I felt more like I was being made to pay for the privilege of selecting a seat than being offered a way to save.”
But passengers bemoaning this latest indignity have only themselves to blame. Why are the legacy airlines all emulating the likes of Spirit and Frontier, which have high rates of passenger dissatisfaction and complaints? Because those budget airlines aredoing extremely well. Travellers have signalled that they are willing to suffer all sorts of discomforts and inconveniences for the sake of a lower fare. America’s big airlines are simply giving them what they wished for.
America's airlines are introducing a class below economy
AS THE candidates in America's presidential race pontificate on the growing divide between the haves and the have-nots, the country's airlines are busy segmenting customers between the haves, the have-lesses, the have-somewhats, the have-no