Qantas axe to 5000 jobs will see prices rise and routes cut
QANTAS management’s decision to axe 5000 jobs is not its only measure to save $2 billion. Flights and routes will be cut drastically.
AUSTRALIAN travellers can kiss goodbye to record low airfares as Qantas’ move to cut staff and reduce services should spell the end for the country’s domestic price war, analysts say.
In what has been the biggest shake-up in the airline’s history, the Flying Kangaroo announced yesterday it would cut 5,000 staff, slash routes and cut or defer the arrival of 50 aircraft into its fleet as it seeks to make $2 billion in savings.
FOLLOW TODAY’S EVENTS ON QANTAS’ DECISION TO AXE 5000 WORKERS
#qantas sells it's terminal lease to Brisbane Airport. The first cash grab for the struggling airline @9NewsBrisbane pic.twitter.com/MhrA9CPZXx
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Australian Business Traveller editor David Flynn said the crisis gripping Qantas should force a major rethink of its business strategy, including a decision to step back from continuing to drive prices down.
“I don’t think Qantas could afford to suddenly jump prices up again because they’re still in a dogfight with Virgin Australia,” he said. “However, I don’t expect — especially in the premium market where they are currently fighting hard with Virgin Australia — to see prices continue to go down.”
Announcing a $252 million half-year loss, Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce outlined plans to retire its 15 remaining Boeing 767s and six Boeing 747s, along with the deferment of deliveries for eight remaining Airbus A380s and other aircraft.
He also announced the airline would exit underperforming routes and change the aircraft it operates on others.
This includes operating Sydney-Singapore and Brisbane-Singapore flights with newer Airbus A330-300 aircraft rather than the existing Boeing 747s, and cutting Perth-Singapore flights altogether from May, which Qantas said have been “underperforming for quite some time.”
It will also reduce the number of wide-body aircraft in its domestic fleet, with the remaining aircraft focused on East-West routes and peak Sydney-Melbourne-Brisbane services.
Analysts say these changes are likely to be just the first round of major route cuts and changes, with Qantas flights to Johannesburg, New York and Tokyo to remain under the microscope.
Pacific Aviation Consulting managing director Oliver Lamb said the decision to cut Perth flights was, in particular, extraordinary.
#QantasCuts affect A LOT of people. Don't understand how? Here are 3 things you need to know about #Qantas http://t.co/h1vaorJgWf
— Herald Sun (@theheraldsun) February 27, 2014
It will mean that Qantas operates no international services from outside the eastern seaboard and sees the airline step away from the country’s fastest growing city.
“It’s the fastest growing city, its economy is very strong, but Qantas doesn’t offer any international services,” Mr Lamb said.
“You’d have to go back a long way to find when they last didn’t offer any flights from Perth.”
In another development that may affect travellers, the Transport Workers Union also yesterday threatened strike action if the Federal Government does not meet with Qantas to find ways to avoid job cuts
“But if (Treasurer) Joe Hockey’s not prepared to do that, then it’s industrial action that the workforce should be considering,” national secretary Tony Sheldon said.
“In this country, if the government won’t stand up for jobs and for the Australian icon, then we will.”