Were Fleet Planning Problems Responsible for the Collapse of Thai Air
Carriers?A Preliminary Case Study of One-Two-Go Airlines
-
Published:2022-12-15
Issue:
Volume:
Page:143-153
-
ISSN:1995-1272
-
Container-title:FWU Journal of Social Sciences
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:FWU Journal
Abstract
The unprecedented growth of the Thai air transport sector that commenced in
the early 2000s attracted at least 30 new air carriers into the country’s airline
market. However, a substantial number of them went bankrupt even before the
COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the world aviation industry. This study
hypothesised that flawed fleet planning was behind the collapse of many
carriers in Thailand. One-Two-Go Airlines, the “low-fare” carrier owned by
Orient Thai Airlines, was used as a case study. The hypothesis was initially
tested by evaluating whether the One-Two-Go fleet of aircraft was in line with
the low-cost airline business model and aircraft selection principles commonly
adopted by many low-cost carriers worldwide. The preliminary findings
indicated that the way the airline planned, acquired, and managed its aircraft
did not appear to be the key factor behind its collapse. Rather, a negative
brand image derived from safety concerns after the crash of Flight 269 was a
key factor causing the airline to cease operations
Publisher
Shaheed Benazir Bhutto Women University Peshawar, Pakistan
Subject
Psychology (miscellaneous),Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),History,Education