Plane Truth
Airline deregulation has saved travelers big money—$15 billion a year, according to a Brookings Institution estimate. But it has also led to increased service, even to small cities. In part, this is because the hub-and-spoke systems developed after deregulation connect travelers from small and medium-sized communities to hubs, from which they can travel to a wider variety of destinations.
In the new journal Domestic Affairs, transportation economist Elizabeth E. Bailey of Carnegie Mellon University reports that the number of flights has increased dramatically since deregulation. Her figures include 28 large cities, 29 medium-sized cities, 58 small cities, and 382 rural or small communities.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Plane Truth."
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Damn I hope that growth was not in just DC-3s. Fine planes and all that, but .....
Management's destruction of the pilot career with numerous bankruptcies and the rabid growth of regional whip-saw airlines coupled with the increasingly insane cost to become a pilot is about to cause some shrinkage. Sorry for the run on sentence.