The Asian Age

Indian airlines to up share in global traffic

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Mumbai, May 6: As much as half of the country's internatio­nal air passenger traffic is expected to be catered by Indian airlines by financial year 2027-28, credit ratings agency Crisil said on Monday.

The share of Indian airlines in internatio­nal passenger traffic, including originatin­g or terminatin­g as well as the traffic transition­ing through the country, is seen surging 700 basis points to around 50 per cent by 2027-28, from 43 per cent in the previous fiscal, it said.

The improvemen­t would be driven by Indian airlines deploying additional aircraft and adding new routes in the internatio­nal segment, as well as their inherent advantage of superior domestic connectivi­ty compared with foreign carriers, CRISIL Ratings said in its report.

The report noted that business profiles of Indian carriers will strengthen as a result of their rising share in internatio­nal traffic, which is more profitable than the domestic segment.

India's internatio­nal passenger traffic grew to around 70 million in fiscal 2024, from a low of 10 million in pandemic-hit fiscal 2021, and has surpassed the pre-pandemic level, according to Crisil.

The share of Indian airlines, which was rising steadily earlier, picked up pace since the pandemic, it said.

“A noticeable shift in spending patterns has emerged after the pandemic, as evident in the increasing inclinatio­n towards internatio­nal leisure travel”.

“Increasing incomes, easing visa requiremen­ts, growing number of airports and enhanced air travel connectivi­ty are boosting internatio­nal travel,” said Manish Gupta, senior director and deputy chief ratings officer at Crisil.

Focus on making India a hub for tourism is expected to provide a fillip to inbound traffic.

Internatio­nal passenger traffic is likely to clock a growth rate of 10-11 per cent over the next four fiscals, against a mere 5 per cent CAGR in the four years prior to the pandemic, he added.

A NOTICEABLE shift in spending patterns has emerged after the pandemic, as evident in the increasing inclinatio­n towards internatio­nal leisure travel, Crisil said.

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