The number of aircraft in Indian skies should be controlled to match the demand of air travellers if domestic carriers want to come out of their
financial rut, global airlines' body IATA has recommended.
"In India, there is a problem of managing capacity in a more effective way -- you have put too many planes at a time when you were caught in a crisis. The market was in difficult situation," IATA Director-General and CEO Giovanni Bisignani
told Indian journalists here.
Asked why Indian airlines were not as profitable as those in Latin America despite high GDP growth, he said, "One of the issues is the capacity problem."
IATA has estimated that Latin American carriers will show a profit of USD 900 million, making it the only region to post two consecutive years of profit.
The IATA chief indicated that in a race to capture the emerging market, the Indian airlines competed among themselves to introduce more planes and flights, leading to a excess capacity and low fares, which hit their financial bottomline.
"One of the problems we have is we go for capacity.
Capturing market share is a short-term strategy, being profit-centric is required in the medium-term. Market share cannot be the only motive of the industry," he said on the
sidelines of the just-concluded IATA Summit.
He said there was a need to match capacity with demand so that airlines can enhance their yields, which are currently low.
Asked about the overall situation facing the aviation industry in India, he said generally the governments, or specifically the finance ministries, the world over were not being supportive of the sector.
"Unfortunately, what happens is that the government -- as is the case in many countries -- is not supporting the aviation ministers. At present, the government is the Ministry
of Finance all around the world," Bisignani said.
Observing that "one of the problems" in India was that the processes took much time to be implemented, he said, "But an example of a process that took so long but the good part
now is the new regulator" or the Airport Economic Regulatory Authority (AERA).
"India could be an example for others. It took a bit of time. For a country which is growing so fast, wants infrastructure badly -- it has to have a regulator to discipline airlines and airports," Bisignani said.
Asked how he would rate private Indian airports, which he had earlier strongly criticised for imposing high charges on airlines and passengers, he said the AERA was now in place.
"We have to be fair and give time. When we
know there is a regulator that is starting to do its job, it would have been incorrect for IATA to not consider this," Bisignani said.
Observing that the aviation industry was likely to make a USD 2.5 billion profit in 2010, he said, "But it is also an industry, (which) in order to survive last year had to raise USD 44 billion debt. So we have USD 217 billion in debt in total. This is not an industry that could live forever with shock in prices."