1
/
of
1
ReadCycle
The Effect of Bankruptcy on US Air Fares
The Effect of Bankruptcy on US Air Fares
Regular price
$0.99 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$0.99 USD
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity
Couldn't load pickup availability
Borenstein and Rose (1995) find that bankruptcy filing per se does not substantially affect the pricing behavior of the bankrupt carrier. In September 2005, Delta entered bankruptcy and USAir emerged from bankruptcy. We follow Borenstein and Rose (1995) by collecting daily data on air fares for Delta, Southwest and USAir airlines around these events. We find that financially healthy airlines (Southwest in this study) apparently do not respond to bankruptcy
events, which is counter to the findings in Borenstein and Rose (1995). We also find that airlines entering bankruptcy (Delta in this study) do not change their pricing strategy in the near-term around the bankruptcy filing and airlines exiting bankruptcy (USAir in this study) price their tickets aggressively.
events, which is counter to the findings in Borenstein and Rose (1995). We also find that airlines entering bankruptcy (Delta in this study) do not change their pricing strategy in the near-term around the bankruptcy filing and airlines exiting bankruptcy (USAir in this study) price their tickets aggressively.
Share
