Flybransjen: Lønnsom for andre enn flyselskapene
The Economist har en artikkel om hvordan de fleste i bransjen, utenom flyselskapene selv, klarer å tjene penger og da spesielt GDSene og diverse mellommenn som virkelig klarer å skumme fløten
http://www.economist.com/node/21560866?fsrc=scn/fb/wl/pe/ineluctablemiddleman
The Economist har en artikkel om hvordan de fleste i bransjen, utenom flyselskapene selv, klarer å tjene penger og da spesielt GDSene og diverse mellommenn som virkelig klarer å skumme fløten
http://www.economist.com/node/21560866?fsrc=scn/fb/wl/pe/ineluctablemiddleman
AIRLINES are wonderful generators of profit—for everyone except themselves. Even in good times their margins are as thin as a boarding pass, and in recent years they have more often lost money (see chart). Averaged over the past four decades, the net profit margin of the world’s airlines, taken together, has been a measly 0.1%. By contrast, other bits of the travel business that depend on the airlines—such as aircraft-makers, travel agents, airports, caterers and maintenance firms—have done very nicely.
In this section
»The ineluctable middlemenn
Some of the tastiest margins in the travel business are enjoyed by the “global distribution systems” (GDSs), a fancy name for computerised-reservations services. These were originally created by several of the largest airlines to distribute their flights through travel agencies but have since become independent firms. Most flights booked through a physical or online travel agent go through a GDS, which charges the airline a fee of about $12 per round trip, passing a few dollars of that to the travel agent. According to Take Travel Forward, an airlines’ lobby group, the world’s carriers pay $7 billion in GDS fees a year—more than double their expected net profits this year of $3 billion.