I read an article today in the SMH traveller section (yes I know.....).
"Changi is a superb airport", says Geoffrey Thomas, the Perth-based editor-in-chief of www.airlineratings.com. "It works so beautifully. That's because it's government-owned, and the Singapore government understands the importance of air travel to the national economy, and invests in the infrastructure to support it."
World's best airport: What it's like to spend 24-hours straight inside Singapore's Changi Airport
I have no idea whether the fellow quoted above has any axe to grind, but on the face of it the comment makes sense.
The thing that struck me about this is that I can't help think our Aussie airports would run better (whisper it!) if they were still under the government's control (Trust me when I tell you I almost broke out in a rash writing that, as a staunch "small-government" guy). I simply can't accept that a geographical monopoly can be expected to do anything except the bare minimum to ensure customers keep using the service.
I'd be interested to hear other folks' opinions of the various public and privately operated airports around the globe, as I'm sure the correlation isn't universal, given that many governments aren't as enlightened to the importance of air travel as the Singapore government appears to be.
Regards,
Peter
"Changi is a superb airport", says Geoffrey Thomas, the Perth-based editor-in-chief of www.airlineratings.com. "It works so beautifully. That's because it's government-owned, and the Singapore government understands the importance of air travel to the national economy, and invests in the infrastructure to support it."
World's best airport: What it's like to spend 24-hours straight inside Singapore's Changi Airport
I have no idea whether the fellow quoted above has any axe to grind, but on the face of it the comment makes sense.
The thing that struck me about this is that I can't help think our Aussie airports would run better (whisper it!) if they were still under the government's control (Trust me when I tell you I almost broke out in a rash writing that, as a staunch "small-government" guy). I simply can't accept that a geographical monopoly can be expected to do anything except the bare minimum to ensure customers keep using the service.
I'd be interested to hear other folks' opinions of the various public and privately operated airports around the globe, as I'm sure the correlation isn't universal, given that many governments aren't as enlightened to the importance of air travel as the Singapore government appears to be.
Regards,
Peter
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