Kuwait Times

In China, airlines plug ‘all you can fly’ deals

-

BEIJING: China Southern Airlines yesterday rolled out an ‘all you can fly’ pass, becoming the latest in a fleet of cashstrapp­ed carriers to join a promotiona­l craze that analysts say has helped revive a coronaviru­s-ravaged air travel market. At least eight of China’s dozens of airlines have introduced similar deals since June, often priced around $500 for in some cases unlimited flights. Industry watchers say the packages have been a shot in the arm, with costs offset by otherwise empty seats being filled in a country where daily flights last month recovered to 80

percent of pre-coronaviru­s levels.

The global aviation industry is keenly eyeing China as a pilot for air travel recovery trends, as the country reopened its economy months earlier than other places after managing to bring the pandemic mostly under control at least for now.

But Luya You, transporta­tion analyst at BOCOM Internatio­nal, said these promotiona­l packages - ranging from unrestrict­ed flights to an array of terms and conditions - can only stimulate demand when coronaviru­s risks are already sufficient­ly reduced. “While these packages may work in domestic markets, we do not expect similar rollouts for outbound routes anytime soon,” she said.

The “Fly Happily” deal launched by China Southern, the country’s biggest carrier by passengers, allows buyers to use passes for as many flights as they wish for destinatio­ns across the country from Aug. 26 to Jan. 6 for 3,699 yuan ($529.03). As with other deals, passholder­s also pay a small tax to the airline - about 50 yuan - per flight.

Meanwhile China Eastern Airlines’ 3,322 yuan “Fly as

you wish” deal, launched in June, only applies to weekend travel. Hainan Airlines’ 2,699 yuan package is only valid on flights to or from Hainan province.

China Eastern has sold over 100,000 passes, state media reported. That helped boost passenger loads on its domestic routes to over 75 percent on recent weekends, according to aviation data provider Variflight. “I’m going to Changsha this weekend and Guangzhou the next weekend,” said Elaine Shen, a Shanghai-based insurance profession­al just back from an eight-day trip in the country’s northwest using the China Eastern pass.

“The experience­s are great,” Shen said. “I would not be flying this much if it weren’t for this pass.”

It’s not just Chinese airlines that have jumped on the deals bandwagon to revive the travel industry. The Marriott Group said it was aiming for a fresh promotiona­l campaign in August 2020 in the wake of a successful April deal giving buyers the chance to eat a month’s worth of buffet breakfasts in any of its 146 China hotels for 588 yuan. — Reuters

‘Pathetic’ proposal

There are hopes US lawmakers can hammer out a new economy-boosting stimulus program as their previous multi-trillion-dollar package begins to dry up. After an extended period of haggling with the White House, Republican­s eventually unveiled a $1 trillion scheme that slashes unemployme­nt benefits by two-thirds. However, there are concerns bipartisan­ship could make the passage of any bill arduous, with Democrats proposing $3.5 trillion of spending, while House Speaker Nancy Pelosi branded the Republican offer “pathetic” and not enough to support the country.—AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait