Wednesday, April 25, 2012
WHY WE HAVE HIGH FARES {Let look inwards}
Presentation by Olumide Ohunayo
Director Research & Strategy
Zenith Travel & Tours
The Chairman
Senate Committee on Aviation
Distinguished members of the Committee
Distinguished Participants and Stakeholders
This presentation is from our organisation Zenith Travel & Tours with
warm regards from the CEO Ayo Olonilua and other members of his team.
We need to look at the issue from the following perspectives:
Regulations: Administration & Implementation.
Supply: Inadequacy of Nigerian Competitors.
Demand: Public Travel Expenditure.
REGULATIONS:
An Airline Protection Unit should be set up in the NCAA to protect
our carriers. They should participate in BASA, SLOT and other
competitive issues. The unit should liaise regularly with the recently
establish economic protection department of the CBN, to monitor
revenue transfer by foreign carriers while ensuring strong competitive
regulations.
A company with significant market power and dominant position
operating in a jurisdiction without standard competition law rules and
a competition authority can in effect engage in any anti-competitive
practice without fear, sadly Nigeria is one of those jurisdictions.
We are giving ultimatums and running from one public hearing hall to
another when the British anti-trust body called Office of the fair
trade (OFT) has fined and collected the fines from BA and VAA for the
same offence committed in Nigeria.
The senate should expedite action on the anti-trust law and the
establishment of a complimenting body, the document is presently,
gathering cobwebs somewhere in the hallowed chambers.
The Fly Nigeria Act should also be looked into by the legislative arm
of government. It’s a critical market bailout law employed by
countries to keep public funds within the economy and shore up market
capacity for home grown carriers.
It will ginger competition and bring down fares. Air Nigeria is in
IATA clearing house which has given them commercial leverage with
other foreign carriers .We can start the act with charter flights and
point to point flight rather than ignore it in totality.
Financial Instruments: the CBN’s newly created economic protection
unit should consider introducing policies that will discourage
ferrying of all funds generated by foreign carriers. That policy will
be a negotiating instrument if it is well implemented. This may sound
draconian but what can be more draconian if it cost Nigerians twice
the fare offered to our Ghanaian counterpart. The CBN can talk to
their counterpart in Venezuela and the Philippines, when they
implemented this policy the foreign carriers buckled.
The ministry of Aviation should also begin the process of reviewing
the bilateral air services agreement [BASA] , these agreement are not
only skewed in favour of the foreign carriers, they inherently do not
protect our carriers principally at airports with slot allocation
issues, considering the ease at which we offer multiple entries.
We need to review the Nigerian Civil Aviation Act: the recent
decision of the administrative panel set up by NCAA to review
decisions taken against the British Carriers with respect to Passenger
fuel Surcharge is another sour remainder of the irritating cease and
desist order.
Alleged High Cost of Operation in Nigeria: When the cost of operation
is high in a country or to a particular airport in that country, the
options open to airlines world over is to reduce frequencies,
capacity, close their bases or stop operations pending review of those
cost.
Also, IATA an international body responsible for coordinating
commercial activities of the industry usually issue alerts and advice
countries with such problems to quickly make amends or review. Nigeria
has not gotten that alert.
Rather the foreign carriers have been increasing capacities,
frequencies and points of entry yet they cling to cost of operations
as an excuse for high fares. The A380 is the biggest passenger
aircraft in world; it is not operating into Nigeria because we do not
have facilities to handle it.
The new B747-8 which is second biggest aircraft will be operating
into Nigeria very soon through a foreign airline, which shows how
juicy the Nigerian routes can be.
We need to facilitate competition and must ensure that facilities
and legislations provided are not diverted or given to non scheduled
operators whose appearance, equipment and ownership are opaque.
We should not be deceived into increasing frequencies for the foreign
carriers as encapsulated by BA country manager; rather we must empower
our carriers and fast track the national carrier project without
recourse to public funds.
SUPPLY: LACK OF COMPETITION: Government intervention in commercial
aviation is usually built on the following pillars:
Tax policies.
Infrastructure provision.
Civil and Labour Regulations.
Aviation Security.
Protection and Encouragement of domestic carriers in a competitive environment
The lack of protection which is one of the pillars has shackled our
carriers’ ability to compete on the international route and has also
made them unattractive to foreign investors.
Government should urgently consider a regulatory consolidation
regime; reduce duties paid on aircrafts, spares and other critical
operational needs. Low interest loans should also be considered for
these carriers, while aviation fuel which is a major cost component of
the industry though de-regulated needs to be guided as obtained in
some countries like Argentina or expanded to incorporate airline
participation. [India recently gave approval to their carriers]
Who should benefit and the conditions?
Airlines with active AOC’s.
Schedule airline operators.
Submission of a verifiable business plan.
Submission of a verifiable financial statement.
Strict compliance and monitoring by the regulatory or appointed agencies.
Distinct separation of passenger and corporate jets.
DEMAND: Public Travel Expenditure: We need to address the high
propensity to travel at all cost for the most rudimentary reasons;
therefore we should reduce public travel expenditure in line with
present day realities and as a palliative support to the fuel subsidy
removal.
We should place a ceiling on fares approved for public officials by
warehousing public travel. We should also plan our travel well ahead
with requisite approval given on time.
Our orientation of having retreats, capacity building over sight and
other Social Programmes that are non essential outside the country
should be reduced or completely discarded.
In conclusion the foreign carriers are guilty and have over the years
exploited Nigerians, legislating or forcing it down their throat will
be give temporal relief, to have an enduring relief we need to look
inwards, or else will be aiding and abetting the clandestine plan of
making Accra the hub West Africa.
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