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More airlines will go out of business but there will still be lots of choices and low prices.

The high fare airlines spend about 10 cents to fly you a mile, the lower fare airlines (Southwest is the best example) spend about 7 cents to fly you a mile.  Thus American, Continental, Delta, Northwest, United, US Air and others spend $400 to fly you from New York to Los Angeles (longer flights cost less per mile).  Add taxes and fees to that and if a round trip ticket is sold to you for less than $500, they are losing money.  Southwest can make money on a $400 ticket.  Why the 30% difference in the cost of a seat-mile?  Senior captains at Delta earn over $250,000 per year, the President of US Air took home over $25,000,000 in 2000, United mechanics negotiated an "industry leading contract" or they would strike yet the airline is owned by the employees, pilot 'scope' clauses in their union contract limit the number of regional jet aircraft (flown by lower paid employees) that an airline can have and they must fly to the hub.  With these fixed costs, neither Boeing nor Airbus make a plane big enough for the full-service airlines to make money when filled with passengers paying $250 to fly across the country.  Until high fare business travelers (paying $2,000 for NY to LA) return to the skies, the more the airlines fly, the more money they will lose and no one believes that fares will go back to that range.  You've heard how to become a millionaire in the airline industry?  Start with 10 million.  I don't believe that the government will (or should) provide financial support for any airline nor should they support airline service to any city (sorry Scottsbluff).  Don't expect any other airline to buy a weak airline.  Most of the others already have too many employees and planes.  That also means that your bank account of frequent flyer miles on a bankrupt airline will be worthless.

What will happen.

If you live in an airline hub city and the airline which controls most of the traffic goes out of business, other airlines will move more flights to that city from their hubs.  You may not have as many (or any) non-stops as you had before thus it may not be as convenient to travel.  They may use regional jets rather than full size jets.  Let's take an example: US Air had hubs in Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Charlotte.  They were operating under Chapter 11.  They were purchased by America West but the consolidated airline retained the US Air name.  Other airlines moved into their hubs with more service.  They smelled "blood in the water" and are going after their market.

If you live in a non-hub city, in many cases, you must travel via a hub and most cities have service from multiple carriers.  Quite often the service is provided by a commuter connector flying under the colors of the major carrier.  If an airline goes out of business, another carrier will probably continue to serve those cities but under a different partner and to different hubs.  At the most, surviving airlines will offer to waive advance purchase requirements for those passengers holding tickets on the failed airline.  However, prices may still be high and there is no guarantee of seats.

Over time, the result will be that the prices paid for leisure travel will rise.  The prices that business travelers pay will drop.

What should you do?

Always buy tickets with a credit card.  If you're going on a cruise, you should know that airlines don't pay commissions to travel agents or cruise lines anymore.  That's the reason you are told to buy your own airfare when you book a cruise.  However some cruise lines buy airline seats in bulk so they can offer "free" airfare with their cruise packages.  If the travel agency through which you bought a cruise package included the "free" airfare, you stand a pretty good chance of having the cruise line and/or travel agency protect you if the airline they selected goes under.

If you are buying your own airline tickets, don't use a weak airline.  Weak does not mean low cost.  Some the most financially sound include Southwest, AirTran, JetBlue and Frontier.

If you hold lots of frequent flyer miles on a weak airline, see if you can move them to another partner airline or spend them in the short term.  An excellent web site is FlyerTalk with lots of great info about each airline.

A little history lesson.

If you look at the airline business, it was born and matured in an era of governmental protection.  Prices were set by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB).  There was no motivation to become efficient.  Like the banking and telecom industries, airlines have entered the arena of competition and deregulation.  Some failed and new entrants take their chances.  The failures of the old line airlines include PanAm (twice), Eastern, Branniff as well as mergers of Western, MorrisAir, Texas Air and many more.  Failures of new entrants include PeopleExpress, Midway (the original), ProAir, Legend, Ozark, Carnival and many others.  There is now a third reincarnation of PanAm.  There are lots of internationally based foreign government owned flag carriers that suffer from huge inefficiencies.  The world market will force these airlines to change unless their government owners (taxpayers) continue to put money into them.  Otherwise they will fail.

When there is no motivation to become efficient, both management and employees lose site of the customer and focus on "me."  I've never seen an industry where the management, employees and customers hate each other so vehemently.  The only airlines which would be fun to be an employee are the new start-ups.  A very interesting contrast can be seen at the various Yahoo message boards that cover the airlines.  Most of the comments are complaints and full of nastiness.  The Southwest Airlines message board is full of optimism and pleads to "serve our city."  An excellent book about Southwest is called "NUTS!" and written by Kevin and Jackie Freiberg.  You can see the reviews at Amazon.  I enjoyed it (plus I have a personally autographed first edition).