The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Airlines say travel for business is lagging

- By DAVID KOENIG AP Airlines Writer

Of the 2 million people clogging airport security lines and gate areas again each day, one crowd is still largely missing: business travelers.

Their absence is noteworthy because they are a key source of revenue and profit, underpinni­ng a record-breaking stretch of financial gain for U.S. airlines that ended with the coronaviru­s.

Business travelers tend to pay higher fares, and that is especially true on internatio­nal flights, which are also still deeply depressed by the pandemic and travel restrictio­ns around the globe. Because their fares subsidize other passengers, their absence is leading to higher leisure fares on many routes, experts say.

Business travelers also spend money on hotels, meals and other things. The U.S. Travel Associatio­n estimates that domestic and internatio­nal business travelers spent more than $300 billion here in 2019. The group forecasts that dwindled to about $95 billion last year and won’t fully recover to 2019 levels until 2024.

During calls with Wall Street analysts last week, U.S. airlines said business travel has picked up in recent weeks but is still down more than half from this time in 2019.

Airlines have been hoping for a major boost in business travel in September, as schools and more offices reopen. Now, however, that optimism is being tempered by the rise in COVID-19 cases around the country fueled the delta variant.

“We are encouraged by the trends that we see out there, but we really are planning that a material amount of business travel won’t come back until after the October period,” Vasu Raja, American Airlines’ chief revenue officer, said last week.

Airline executives are counting on people like Vazar Lukovic, who owns a digital marketing agency and a production company near London. Lukovic says he is willing to put up with higher prices on some of his flights to places like

 ??  ??
 ?? (AP PHOTO/RICK BOWMER, FILE) ?? In this Wednesday, March 17, 2021file photo, travelers walk through the Salt Lake City Internatio­nal Airport in Salt Lake City. Of the 2million people clogging airport security lines and gate areas again each day, one crowd is still largely missing: business travelers.
(AP PHOTO/RICK BOWMER, FILE) In this Wednesday, March 17, 2021file photo, travelers walk through the Salt Lake City Internatio­nal Airport in Salt Lake City. Of the 2million people clogging airport security lines and gate areas again each day, one crowd is still largely missing: business travelers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States