Melburnian1
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2013
- Posts
- 25,825
Re last sentence… ‘so it should’!
Australian representatives flying overseas should be required to use - to the maximum extent possible - the services of Australian airlines.
This supports Australian jobs, and the advantages of Aussie crews.
But at what cost to taxpayers if, as is often the case, there's a huge price difference between Qantas (super expensive) and foreign competitors?
Let's not forget that Qantas itself is "about" 45 to 49 per cent foreign owned (the upper limit coming from the Qantas Sale Act).
Foreign airlines create jobs in Australia: check-in staff, baggage handlers, catering, trucks delivering air freight, couriers, Uber, Didi, taxis, bus operators and railways delivering passengers and crews to and from airports.
Qantas and Jetstar employ foreign airline crews. QF1/QF2 between SIN-LHR and return is one example.
Using a cheaper alternative than Qantas is good business sense, and magnified by how foreign airlines are often way superior to QF's service standards on board.
You're arguing for a form of non-tariff protection. Abolishing tariffs and quotas was one of the best trade-related moves by an Australian government ever. Keating did it with full support from then Opposition Leader Howard.
