American Airlines Struggles as Rivals Merge

From NY Times: American Airlines Struggles as Rivals Merge



American is one of only three major carriers that have never filed for bankruptcy, along with Southwest Airlines and Alaska Airlines. As a result, the company is hobbled with much higher costs than its competitors, most of which have used bankruptcy proceedings to rewrite their labor contracts and airplane leases, terminate pensions and health benefits, and restructure their debt. If it had contracts similar to Delta's or Continental's, the company estimates its expenses would be $600 million lower each year.

In other words, the airline is in trouble because it has *not* gone through bankruptcy (to break contracts and turn debt to equity).

David Levinson

Network Reliability in Practice

Evolving Transportation Networks

Place and Plexus

The Transportation Experience

Access to Destinations

Assessing the Benefits and Costs of Intelligent Transportation Systems

Financing Transportation Networks

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This page contains a single entry by David Levinson published on May 20, 2010 7:11 AM.

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