Deregulation started in 1978 which is why I assume the author chose to create his infographic based on that year. So while the civil aeronautics board did still exist it was clearly the beginning of its end.Actually, you couldn’t be more wrong.
This was 1978. US Airways did not yet exist.
In 1978, the airlines were still under regulation, until deregulation was signed in late October of that year.
Very little competition.
All of the fares were still set by the civil aeronautics board, and all the airlines made a nice comfortable profit without having to worry about competition.
Airlines competed to get government approval for contracts, cities got served, and an airline ticket cost about as much as a new car.
You are looking back and fantasizing about something that did not exist at that time.
In 1968 my dad flew 250,000 miles on United Airlines.
The regular seats were spacious. The food was served on actual china and the cutlery was stainless steel. The flight attendant would carve a roast, and everybody would get a slice as they came down the aisle with a proper meal.
Flight attendants were young, and slender, and they had to weigh in for each flight. They were well paid, attentive, and flying was glamorous.
My dad often booked the smoking section to enjoy a cigar after a nice dinner.
The average fare was around $3,000.
His 1968 Ford Country Squire was $2,800.
Deregulation changed all that. With all sorts of entrance into the airline business, and barriers to exit, the industry lost more money in the 30 years following deregulation, than it had made in its entire history prior to that.
And all the things that people complain about today, are the result of an industry that is deregulated, and seeking to make a profit. Don’t like smaller seats? well, the airline that offers bigger seats has to charge more money and they don’t get the traffic. Don’t like the food? Well, food cost money?
You can still book an experience like my father’s 1968 flights on carriers like Emirates - but don’t be surprised if your ticket hits $100,000 or more.
The truth about air travel, that no one wants to admit, is that the flying Public got exactly what they demanded. They wanted cheap and they got it.
If you want a nice experience, charter an airplane, or book a private suite on Emirates
But nice try trying to gaslight us with 1968 pricing and blaming the current issues on the public. Funny how US companies that must compete on a global scale like big tech, investment banks and oil tech literally have no global equals but coddled industries like US airlines seem to constantly struggle.