04595nam 22006495 450 991102114710332120250819130250.0981-9673-03-810.1007/978-981-96-7303-2(CKB)40378349700041(MiAaPQ)EBC32266835(Au-PeEL)EBL32266835(OCoLC)1534199530(DE-He213)978-981-96-7303-2(EXLCZ)994037834970004120250819d2025 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierAviation Policies Studies of Unintended Effects and Consequences /by Hideki Fukui1st ed. 2025.Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :Imprint: Springer,2025.1 online resource (536 pages)981-9673-02-X Airport slot trading and airlines competition -- Airport slot trading in the United States -- Effect of slot trading on route-level competition: Evidence from experience in the UK -- Slot restrictions and airlines’ manipulative behavior -- Do carriers abuse the slot system to inhibit airport capacity usage? Evidence from the US experience -- How do slot restrictions affect airfares? New evidence from the US airline industry -- Airlines’ reaction to aviation fuel tax and consumer protection -- The impact of aviation fuel tax on fuel consumption and carbon emissions: The case of the US airline industry -- Flight cancellation as a reaction to the tarmac delay rule: An unintended consequence of enhanced passenger protection -- How do passengers react to airlines’ overbooking strategies? Evidence from the US airlines -- Conclusion.This book sheds new light on aviation policies’ unintended effects and consequences, especially regarding infrastructure, environment, and consumer protection. The book provides the reader with the first systematic quantitative analyses of the impacts of airlines’ strategic reactions to the introduction of airport slot markets, aviation fuel tax, and consumer protection rules. Through extensive empirical investigations, the author reveals that aviation policies based on the regulations and tax can produce both intended and unintended effects and consequences. Although the introduction of airport slot markets was expected to enhance airline competition, airlines’ manipulative behaviors have impeded the slot markets’ effective functioning. Also, the aviation fuel tax can reduce emissions in the air transport market effectively, but the amount of the reduction of fuel consumption and CO2 emissions would be smaller in the longer term due to the rebound effect. Finally, the consumer protection rules, e.g., the tarmac delay rule of the US Department of Transportation (DOT) significantly reduced tarmac delays; however, the DOT’s investigations of tarmac delay incidents triggered the investigated airlines’ risk-averse behavior, which increased flight cancelations and gate departure delays to avoid violating the rule. The analyses suggest that the most effective way of regulation depends on conditions unique to each policy area; the government should design interventions that circumvent strategic behaviors of subjects or groups that the interventions affect. This book is highly relevant to academics and practitioners interested in understanding the interactive effects between policy interventions and firms’ strategic reactions.TransportationIndustrial policyPolitical planningStatisticsComparative governmentTransportation EconomicsRegulation and Industrial PolicyPolicy EvaluationStatistics in Business, Management, Economics, Finance, InsuranceComparative Public PolicyTransportation.Industrial policy.Political planning.Statistics.Comparative government.Transportation Economics.Regulation and Industrial Policy.Policy Evaluation.Statistics in Business, Management, Economics, Finance, Insurance.Comparative Public Policy.388.049Fukui Hideki1844501MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911021147103321Aviation Policies4427149UNINA