New Delhi: National carrier Air India has positioned itself clearly between the full-service airlines (Kingfisher and Jet) and budget carriers (IndiGo, Spice and JetLite).
Kingfisher and Jet raised fuel surcharge by up to Rs 300 in early April because jet fuel had become expensive. But Air India refused to follow their example. As a result, its fares are now up to Rs 300 below those of Jet and Kingfisher, and 5-10 per cent higher than the budget carriers. (The budget carriers too did not increase the surcharge.)
On top of that, Air India has come out with discounts of up to 70 per cent on 41 short-haul routes like Agartala-Guwahati, Agatti-Kochi, Chandigarh-Delhi, Mangalore-Mumbai and Hyderabad-Tirupati.
The scheme is graded. Travellers who book 30 days in advance on these routes can get 70 per cent discount. Booking the ticket 20 days in advance can get 50-60 per cent discount. Lower discount is on offer if it is booked 10 days in advance.
Air India has recovered market share from full-service as well as budget carriers in the last one year.
05/05/09 Anirban Chowdhury/Business Standard
To Read the News in full at Source, Click the Headline
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Home »
NACIL May 2009
» Air India: The middle path
Air India: The middle path
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
0 comments:
Post a Comment