Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Labour Costs, Higher Fuel Push Airfare Skyward, Boosting Rise In Inflation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Aug, 2018 12:54 PM
    MONTREAL — Rising fuel costs drove a 28 per cent year-over-year rise in the price of airfare and helped push inflation to its highest level since 2011.
     
     
    The leap in airfares — which moved in rough alignment with a 25-per-cent increase in the price of gasoline — tacked on 0.3 percentage points to overall price growth of 3.0 per cent over the past year, said TD Economics senior economist James Marple.
     
     
    "It's not surprising to see that eventually being passed on to consumers."
     
     
    The heads of Air Canada and WestJet Airlines Ltd. recently warned that costlier jet fuel would be offset with higher fares.
     
     
    Air Canada shelled out 32 per cent more on fuel in the first half of 2018 — $1.79 billion — compared with the same period last year. Its Calgary-based competitor spent $583 million on jet fuel in the first six months of 2018, 27 per cent more than its fuel costs in the first two quarters of 2017.
     
     
    However, gas isn't the only reason passengers may feel gouged at the gate.
     
     
    Statistics Canada analyst Taylor Mitchell pointed to a jump in demand for flights to Europe and Asia last month, which may have pushed airfares higher.
     
     
    "We noticed that that coincides with the World Cup," Mitchell said. The soccer competition was held in Russia and ran through mid-July.
     
     
    Mitchell also noted that a StatsCan methodology change last March skews year-over-year comparisons, with the agency now using more data to capture the extent of peak travel.
     
     
    James Marple called the inflation ramp-up a "one-off" that reflects the impact of higher fuel and labour costs on the airline industry.
     
     
    "The size of the gain in July can't have been just a fuel cost thing," the economist said.
     
     
    The updraft in fares occurred in spite of the recent rise of ultra-low-price upstarts such as Edmonton-based Flair Airlines and WestJet offshoot Swoop, as well as Air Canada's six-year-old Rouge unit.
     
     
    "If it wasn't for all this competition in a lot of these big marketplaces, the impact of rising fuel prices or general upward pressure on labour rates in a highly unionized sector might make the price go up more than they did," said Robert Kokonis, president of Toronto-based consulting firm AirTrav Inc.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Montreal Model Known As Zombie Boy Dead At 32, Lady Gaga Mourns 'Zombie Boy' Rick Genest's Demise

    Montreal Model Known As Zombie Boy Dead At 32, Lady Gaga Mourns 'Zombie Boy' Rick Genest's Demise
    The agency that represents a Quebec model known for his head-to-toe tattoos and his participation in Lady Gaga music video "Born This Way" says he has died.

    Montreal Model Known As Zombie Boy Dead At 32, Lady Gaga Mourns 'Zombie Boy' Rick Genest's Demise

    Woman Found Dead At Regal Hotel Is Vancouver's 13Th Homicide Victim Of 2018: Police

    Woman Found Dead At Regal Hotel Is Vancouver's 13Th Homicide Victim Of 2018: Police
    The VPD’s Major Crime Section is investigating after the discovery of woman’s body in a Granville Street apartment in downtown Vancouver early Wednesday morning.

    Woman Found Dead At Regal Hotel Is Vancouver's 13Th Homicide Victim Of 2018: Police

    Expensive Cars Impounded, Drivers Ticketed For Speed On Lougheed Highway

    Expensive Cars Impounded, Drivers Ticketed For Speed On Lougheed Highway
    Two high-end sports cars have been impounded for a week and their drivers issued tickets after police in Metro Vancouver say they recorded the vehicles going almost 50 kilometres an hour over the posted speed limit.

    Expensive Cars Impounded, Drivers Ticketed For Speed On Lougheed Highway

    CIBC Refunding 1.4 Million Credit Card Customers For Years Of Improper Fees

    CIBC Refunding 1.4 Million Credit Card Customers For Years Of Improper Fees
    The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce is refunding 1.4 million customers for improperly charging credit card fees over 14 years.

    CIBC Refunding 1.4 Million Credit Card Customers For Years Of Improper Fees

    Vancouver, Victoria Shorelines Littered With Cigarette Butts, Researchers

    VICTORIA — A study analyzing data from volunteer shoreline cleanups in British Columbia says cigarettes and filters from them account for almost 50 per cent of the waste collected in Vancouver and Victoria.

    Vancouver, Victoria Shorelines Littered With Cigarette Butts, Researchers

    RCMP Investigating After German Tourist Shot In Head While Driving With Family On Alberta Highway

    RCMP Investigating After German Tourist Shot In Head While Driving With Family On Alberta Highway
    MORLEY, Alta. — Mounties in southern Alberta are investigating a possible road rage attack after a German tourist was shot in the head while driving on a highway.

    RCMP Investigating After German Tourist Shot In Head While Driving With Family On Alberta Highway