It’s Time To Break Up JetBlue and American Airlines’ Unholy Alliance

This no-brainer anticompetitive issue could shape the future of air travel in the U.S.

Alex Kantrowitz
Marker

--

Photo by Justin Hu on Unsplash

Now that travelers are back up in the air, many in the Northeastern United States are experiencing an unpleasant surprise. People booking JetBlue flights have found themselves on American Airlines planes. And vice versa. Often with little or last-second disclosure

The swaps are a product of an unholy alliance formed in the heart of the pandemic by the two airlines. They’ve agreed to sell each other’s flights. So if you book with one, you may end up on the other. This can leave travelers scrambling to locate terminals, boarding passes, and baggage policies — often at the last moment. And worse, the two airlines selling together will inevitably lead to less competition.

In the U.S. today, four airlines — American, Delta, United, and Southwest — control about 80% of the domestic market, per the Open Markets Institute. Now that JetBlue, one of the remaining upstarts, has joined forces with one of the four, prices are poised to rise and bad customer service is likely to get worse.

Already, the alliance has attracted the U.S. government’s attention, a welcome surprise. In this country, we’re accustomed to big…

--

--

Responses (3)