Date - Heure / Date - Hour
Date(s) - 07/03/2019
10h30 - 11h30
Emplacement / Location
ENAC, Building Ziegler, Room Z013
Causes and Effects of Air Traffic Delays: Evidence from Aggregated Data
This study uses aggregated data on concentration, delays, and airfares from the US airports to shed light on two issues. First, we examine the concentration-delays relationship to contribute to the airport- congestion self-internalization debate. Our study is the first investigation of this issue that uses data on sources of delays. Second, we evaluate whether increases in flight delays result in lower airfares when traveling from an airport. Our empirical results are mixed: while total delays are positively correlated with airport-level concentration (contradicting the self-internalization hypothesis), the variance of delays at larger airports does fall as concentration increases. We also find that an increase in airport concentration consistently decreases the share of delays that can be deemed endogenous to the airline. The negative relationship between delays and prices is confirmed, and estimates of this effect are similar to those found in the relevant literature. Of the various sources of delay, weather and late- aircraft delays have the strongest negative impact on prices.
Keywords: airport congestion, delays, internalization