Press Release - 11 November 2006 |
CHEAP FLIGHTS - POOR NEED NOT APPLY
News that it is the wealthy and not the poor who are benefitting from cheap
air travel will come as a major embarrassment to the Government with the
publication (9 November) of Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) statistics on
airport use.
The average income of UK leisure passengers travelling through cheap flights
mecca Stansted Airport topped £50,000 in 2005 for the first time according
to the CAA's 2005 Passenger Survey Report. The actual figure was £51,141 a
year, dispelling the Government myth that cheap flights are somehow
democratising air travel by providing opportunities for poor people to fly.
The CAA survey also shows that 83% of passengers using Stansted Airport in
2005 were A/B/C1s the most affluent socio-economic groups, whereas only
7.7% were D/Es the poorer members of society.
The difficulty, of course, for those on lower incomes is that it is all very
well to buy a cheap flight to Marseille, Milan or Madrid but a weekend break
for two could still cost the best part of £500 when the cost of the hotel,
meals, taxis and of course the airport car parking bill at Stansted are
added together.
The Government has long argued that the reason it allows continued tax
exemptions for aviation on everything from tax free aviation fuel to the VAT
exemption and the highly profitable business of allowing duty and tax-free
sales is because it doesn't want to "price poor people off planes".
However, this latest data clearly demonstrates that it is the richer sectors
of society who are reaping the benefits of cheap flights.
This is reinforced by the fact that Ryanair's annual advertising budget with
The Telegraph is reportedly in the region of £2 million per year,
outstripping its expenditure with any other national newspaper. Meanwhile,
even the Financial Times knows its affluent readership likes a bargain,
focusing in its November luxury magazine “How To Spend It” on the
opportunities to combine luxury holidays with cheap flights. Examples
included using Ryanair 'cheapies' to reach a Lake Garda hotel where prices
start at £339 per night and of a 5-Star Venice hotel whose private water
taxi regularly meets the Easyjet flight from Stansted.
While the poor need not apply, those on lower incomes are the ones who lose
out in other ways to subsidise cheap flights. Motorists, for example, pay a
staggering 70 percent on every litre of petrol in tax while airlines get
away scot free, with the tax breaks on aviation fuel worth some £8.8 billion
a year. If aviation were to be taxed at the same rate as road fuel, this
would be more than enough to end means-tested pension credits and pay for a
£35 a week uplift in the basic state pension for a single person and a £56 a
week uplift for a married couple a 40 percent increase in each case.
While this might not entirely eliminate pensioner poverty, it would make a
far greater contribution than the annual £8.8bn of tax breaks to the aviation industry which allow
such cheap flights.
The Government is under increasing pressure to curb the growth in air travel
as a result of the dire predictions about its impact upon climate change and
its support for cheap flights under the pretext of 'helping the poor to
travel' is disingenuous according to Stop Stansted Expansion.
Last year's Tyndall Report ('Decarbonising the UK: energy for a climate
conscious future') showed that the rapid growth in air travel threatens to
wipe out all other planned savings in carbon emissions over the next thirty
years if left unchecked. The Stern Report commissioned for the Chancellor
and published by the Government on 31 October also highlighted the cost of
not taking decisive action now to curtail our carbon emissions while another
recent report from Oxford University's Environmental Change Institute
('Predict and decide: aviation, climate change and UK policy') published on
17 October called for higher taxes on air travel as a means of reducing the
unsustainable growth in aviation.
“Aviation is the fastest growing source of global warming emissions yet it
continues to enjoy the most favourable tax treatment of any industry,
resulting in artificially low prices which stimulate demand. Calls for its
true costs to be reflected in pricing continue to be resisted by the
Government which panders to the aviation industry's demands for
business-as-usual,” said Brian Ross, Stop Stansted Expansion's Economics
Adviser.
“The Government must face up to its responsibilities by recognising that
encouraging a switch to low energy light bulbs (for example) might be an
important first step but pales into insignificance in comparison to the
enormous impacts of the carbon emissions arising from unsustainable growth
in air travel,” he concluded.
ENDS
NOTE TO EDITORS
Highlights of the 2005 Passenger Survey Report were issued by the CAA on 24
October but the publication of the detail of the findings for Stansted and
other UK airports was delayed until 9 November. See
www.caa.co.uk/default.aspx?categoryid=81&pagetype=90&pageid=6554.
Details of SSE's calculations of the annual value of the fuel duty and VAT
exemption on air travel, and of the costings for increasing the basic state
pension are available upon request.
FURTHER INFORMATION
Carol Barbone, Campaign Director, Stop Stansted Expansion M 0777 552 3091 and cbarbone@mxc.co.uk
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