published journal article

Intercontinental-airport regulation

Transportation Research Part B: Methodological

Publication Date

June 1, 2013

Author(s)

W. Benoot, Jan Brueckner, S. Proost

Abstract

This paper analyzes strategic interaction between intercontinental airport regulators, each of which levies airport charges paid by airlines and chooses its airport capacity under conditions of congestion. Congestion from intercontinental flights is common across intercontinental airports since departure and arrival airports are linked one to one, while purely domestic traffic also uses each airport. The paper focuses on two questions. First, if both continents can strategically set separate airport charges for domestic and intercontinental flights, how will the outcome differ from the first-best solution? Second, how is strategic airport behavior affected by the extent of market power of the airlines serving the intercontinental market? We see that strategic airport pricing and capacity choices by regulators lead to a welfare loss: the regulators both behave as monopolists in the market for intercontinental flights, charging a mark-up and decreasing capacity. This welfare loss even overshadows possible negative effects from imperfect competition within the intercontinental airline market. We further discuss how the presence of multiple regulators on one continent or a simple pricing rule might constrain the welfare loss created by strategic airport regulation. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Suggested Citation
W. Benoot, J.K. Brueckner and S. Proost (2013) “Intercontinental-airport regulation”, Transportation Research Part B: Methodological, 52, pp. 56–72. Available at: 10.1016/j.trb.2013.03.001.