LatAm aviation growth to drive social, economic benefits

JUNE 8, 2015: The International Transport Association (IATA) announced that passenger growth in Latin America and the Caribbean (LatAm) could reach 385 million within ten years if the region’s governments address infrastructure bottlenecks, embrace smarter regulation, and observe global standards and best practices. In 2014, passenger numbers in the region were 242 million. “Air transport […]

JUNE 8, 2015: The International Transport Association (IATA) announced that passenger growth in Latin America and the Caribbean (LatAm) could reach 385 million within ten years if the region’s governments address infrastructure bottlenecks, embrace smarter regulation, and observe global standards and best practices. In 2014, passenger numbers in the region were 242 million.
“Air transport is the mass transit system of the global economy; it drives economic growth, creates jobs, and facilitates business opportunities. Already, the Latin American and Caribbean region supports 4.9 million jobs and contributes $153 billion to regional GDP, including the benefits of travel and tourism. While this is a sizable contribution to the regions economic well-being, the region has the potential to extract much more value from aviation,” said Peter Cerda, IATA’s Regional Vice President, during the Association’s Annual General Meeting and World Air Transport Summit.
Latin America and the Caribbean are well-positioned to unlock the transformative social and economic benefits robust air connectivity provides, but the region will have to overcome various obstacles to achieve it. The region is home to more than 8 percent of the world’s population yet only accounts for 5 percent of all global air traffic. Latin America and the Caribbean could therefore increase air traffic more than 50 percent before the region reached even its minimum potential global share. Certainly, there is considerable room for air traffic growth in the region if the roadblocks are removed.
The lack of adequate infrastructure, primarily airport infrastructure, is provoking capacity constraints in the region. For this reason, only two countries in the region, Panama and Barbados, rank among the best 35 countries in the world for the quality of their air transport infrastructure. Among the region’s larger economies, Brazil is ranked 131, Colombia 105 and Mexico 64. There are some bright spots: the future Mexico City airport is an excellent opportunity to create a world-class hub that strikes the correct balance between passenger comfort and a facility that keeps costs reasonable for airlines and the flying public.
Another area of concern in the region is the need for Smarter Regulation aligned with global standards and best practices. Governments in the region—with the notable exception of Panama and Chile—tend to view airlines as purveyors of luxury services and an easy target for levying taxes or applying onerous regulation. An unfortunate illustration of this is Brazil, where its consumer protection regime is not aligned with global standards and best practices and places an unfair burden on the industry.
“It is important for the region’s governments to understand that the real value of aviation is the global connectivity it provides and the growth and development it stimulates. Aviation is highly susceptible to increases in taxation, onerous regulation, and the inconsistent application of rules and regulations. However, when governments adhere to global standards and work in partnership with the aviation industry, the positive economic repercussions aviation brings are easily attainable. The efforts by air carriers to create a dynamic and thriving aviation industry will only be realized if governments work to ensure excessive taxes and regulations don’t stunt its excellent growth prospects,” said Cerda.

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