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N. Upchurch's avatar

Very interesting article! It makes sense that a number of government services could operate more efficiently if privatized; e.g. USPS. With regard to ATC, would the airlines then be the primary source of income thereby increasing passenger fees?

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Arthur Rypinski's avatar

An interesting piece. Privatized ATC is hard, because a) ATC is a natural monopoly, b) it produces a product with wide public benefits; c) there are inherent conflicts among user classes; d) it is desirable to avoid boosting cash flow via under-investment, ; and e) the complexity of writing contracts that are sophisticated enough to mitigate a), b), c), and d).

It is difficult to imagine multiple competing ATC systems, at least within a single airport or geographic regions. So, we are stuck with a single monopoly provider, presumably government-franchised. An unregulated monopoly provider could set prices based, not on the cost of its services, but on the value of air access to particular airports or regions, permitting them to extract rent from airlines, airports, and slots. And it could get worse from there.

The main point is that unregulated private provider is a non-starter unless you want it evolve into an aviation services monopoly like Soviet Aeroflot. So, private ATC has to regulated like a public utility (like electricity) or a common carrier (like railroads) to provide equal access and open entry and exit to all airlines and not price general aviation out of existence. ATC has to prioritize safety. ATC has to maintain its facilities and invest to meet growing demand rather than restricting demand through pricing or congestion. Private ATC's pricing or reimbursement mechanism should reflect this requirement. T

These points make for a complicated contract or franchise agreement, with the devil in the details. It takes a very capable government to write such contracts, and to keep various interested parties from tilting it one direction or another.

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