New evidence on airline mergers : a study on 9 recent U.S. airline mergers.

Advocates of airline mergers often cite declining average airfares over the last decade and efficiency gains as defences against anti-competitive concerns. We investigate this contention by examining price changes on 101 overlapped routes of 9 mergers from 1997 to 2011. Noting the absence of researc...

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Main Authors: Lee, Da Wei., Lim, Xie Mai., Tee, Alstone Jia Loong.
Other Authors: Tham Tze Minn
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51534
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-515342023-05-19T06:16:16Z New evidence on airline mergers : a study on 9 recent U.S. airline mergers. Lee, Da Wei. Lim, Xie Mai. Tee, Alstone Jia Loong. Tham Tze Minn Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business Advocates of airline mergers often cite declining average airfares over the last decade and efficiency gains as defences against anti-competitive concerns. We investigate this contention by examining price changes on 101 overlapped routes of 9 mergers from 1997 to 2011. Noting the absence of research dedicated to the analysis of mergers involving financially-distressed (Fin-D) airlines in recent years, we distinguished between mergers involving airlines that are financially healthy (normal) and mergers involving Fin-D airlines. The results show that airfares of overlapped routes increased after a normal merger but decreased after a Fin-D merger. In particular, we demonstrate that an increase in route concentration leads to an increase in airfares for all mergers. We also find an inverse relationship between the availability of substitutes and change in airfares after a normal merger. In addition, we find surprising evidence that mergers involving Fin-D airlines are fundamentally motivated by the need to restructure rather than to increase market power. In light of these findings, we strongly propose that the United States Department of Justice place a greater emphasis on analysing the effects of route concentration on airfares for all mergers and reconsider the effect of route distances on airfares when evaluating a normal merger. BUSINESS 2013-04-04T07:47:15Z 2013-04-04T07:47:15Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51534 en Nanyang Technological University 53 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business
Lee, Da Wei.
Lim, Xie Mai.
Tee, Alstone Jia Loong.
New evidence on airline mergers : a study on 9 recent U.S. airline mergers.
description Advocates of airline mergers often cite declining average airfares over the last decade and efficiency gains as defences against anti-competitive concerns. We investigate this contention by examining price changes on 101 overlapped routes of 9 mergers from 1997 to 2011. Noting the absence of research dedicated to the analysis of mergers involving financially-distressed (Fin-D) airlines in recent years, we distinguished between mergers involving airlines that are financially healthy (normal) and mergers involving Fin-D airlines. The results show that airfares of overlapped routes increased after a normal merger but decreased after a Fin-D merger. In particular, we demonstrate that an increase in route concentration leads to an increase in airfares for all mergers. We also find an inverse relationship between the availability of substitutes and change in airfares after a normal merger. In addition, we find surprising evidence that mergers involving Fin-D airlines are fundamentally motivated by the need to restructure rather than to increase market power. In light of these findings, we strongly propose that the United States Department of Justice place a greater emphasis on analysing the effects of route concentration on airfares for all mergers and reconsider the effect of route distances on airfares when evaluating a normal merger.
author2 Tham Tze Minn
author_facet Tham Tze Minn
Lee, Da Wei.
Lim, Xie Mai.
Tee, Alstone Jia Loong.
format Final Year Project
author Lee, Da Wei.
Lim, Xie Mai.
Tee, Alstone Jia Loong.
author_sort Lee, Da Wei.
title New evidence on airline mergers : a study on 9 recent U.S. airline mergers.
title_short New evidence on airline mergers : a study on 9 recent U.S. airline mergers.
title_full New evidence on airline mergers : a study on 9 recent U.S. airline mergers.
title_fullStr New evidence on airline mergers : a study on 9 recent U.S. airline mergers.
title_full_unstemmed New evidence on airline mergers : a study on 9 recent U.S. airline mergers.
title_sort new evidence on airline mergers : a study on 9 recent u.s. airline mergers.
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51534
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