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{{Short description|American airline with interstate routes established before 1978}}
{{Short description|US carrier that was federally regulated before 1979}}
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In the [[United States]], a '''legacy carrier''' is an airline that was once economically regulated by the [[Civil Aeronautics Board]] (CAB) during the period of airline regulation 1938–1978 or can trace its origin to one that did. The CAB was a now defunct federal agency that tightly controlled almost all US commercial air transport during that period. As related below, many features associated with the legacy airline business model were actually developed not during the regulated era, but instead in the first decade or so of the deregulated era, as legacy carriers adapted to an unfamiliar competitive environment.
In the [[United States]], a '''legacy carrier''' is an airline that had established interstate routes before the beginning of the route [[airline deregulation|liberalization]] permitted by the [[Airline Deregulation Act]] of 1978, and was therefore directly affected by it. Legacy carriers are distinct from [[low-cost carriers]], which, in the United States, are generally new airlines that entered the market after 1978 to compete in the newly deregulated industry.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.sgrlaw.com/ttl-articles/859/|title=TURBULENCE in the Airline Industry|website=SGR Law|language=en-US|access-date=2020-01-22}}</ref>


As of 2024 there are five surviving legacy carriers, but note that Alaska and Hawaiian are currently seeking approval for a merger:<ref>{{cite web|url=https://apnews.com/article/merger-acquisition-hawaiian-alaska-air-a4305e792b1dfb3bb07d8c975138d7f9|title=Alaska Air to buy Hawaiian Airlines in a $1.9 billion deal that may attract regulator scrutiny|website=apnews.com|publisher=Associated Press|language=en|access-date=25 July 2024}}</ref>
==Background==
A typical characteristic of legacy carriers is that they usually provide higher quality services than a low-cost carrier; for example, a legacy carrier typically offers [[First class (aviation)|first class]] and [[business class]] seating, a [[frequent-flyer program]], and exclusive [[airport lounge]]s.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://thetravelinsider.info/airlinemismanagement/airlinederegulation2.htm|title=The Effects of US Airline Deregulation 1970 - 2010|website=thetravelinsider.info|access-date=2020-01-22}}</ref> Many legacy carriers are also members of an [[airline alliance]], through which they agree to provide reciprocal services to the passengers of other airlines in the same alliance.


The term 'legacy carrier' has generally not been used outside the United States. Many other countries have long-established [[flag carrier]]s that are or were historically owned by or often given preferential treatment by their national governments. The national airlines occupy a position roughly equivalent to the American legacy carriers on quality of service and membership in international alliances compared to newer low-cost carriers. No American legacy carriers are official flag carriers in the United States.

Since the Deregulation Act, many legacy carriers have folded or merged with other carriers. Those that survived now benefit from the fact that low-cost carriers no longer hold large cost advantages over the major legacy carriers.<ref name="Legacy vs low-cost carriers">{{cite news|title=Legacy vs low-cost carriers: Spot the difference|url=https://www.economist.com/blogs/gulliver/2013/03/legacy-vs-low-cost-carriers|newspaper=The Economist | date=26 March 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title='Low cost' vs. 'legacy airlines'|url=http://www.kpmg.com/uk/en/issuesandinsights/articlespublications/newsreleases/pages/low-cost-vs-legacy-airlines-distinction-between-the-two-increasingly-irrelevant-says-kpmg.aspx|work=KPMG|date=August 25, 2022 }}</ref>

A trend among legacy carriers is to outsource short-haul and medium-haul flights to [[regional airline]]s. In 2011, 61% of all advertised flights by [[American Airlines|American]], [[United Airlines|United]], and [[Delta Air Lines|Delta]] were operated by a regional airline, an increase from 40% in 2000.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/columnist/mcgee/2014/09/24/airplane-reclining-seat-pitch-width/16105491/ | title=Think airline seats have gotten smaller? They have | website=[[USA Today]] }}</ref> Another trend is for legacy carriers to enter into "fare wars", where the legacy airline will lower their fares until they force new low cost carriers out of the market.{{cn|date=June 2024}}

The term does not apply to current-day major carriers that, while having existed before the [[Airline Deregulation Act]], did not operate interstate and were solely intrastate regional airlines until after the passage of the Act: prominent examples include [[Southwest Airlines]] which opened its first non-Texas route in 1979, and [[Hawaiian Airlines]] did not fly outside of Hawaii until 1985.

==Active legacy carriers==
As of 2024, the list of legacy carriers remaining is as follows:
* [[Alaska Airlines]]
* [[Alaska Airlines]]
* [[American Airlines]]
* [[American Airlines]]
* [[Delta Air Lines]]
* [[Delta Air Lines]]
* [[Hawaiian Airlines]]
* [[Hawaiian Airlines]]
<!-- Do not add Southwest to this list. Southwest existed prior to the passage of the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, but operated exclusively within Texas, and was exempt from the interstate regulation that defines a legacy carrier. -->
* [[United Airlines]]
* [[United Airlines]]


==Defunct legacy carriers==
Legacy carriers do not include:
* Any airline founded after the regulated era. A few prominent examples of such carriers include [[America West Airlines]], [[ValuJet]], [[JetBlue]] and [[Spirit Airlines]].
* Any US airline with a pre-1979 origin which was not regulated by the CAB. There are two significant US airlines today that operated pre-1979 but were not regulated by the CAB. The most prominent is [[Southwest Airlines]], which started operations in 1971 but was never subject to CAB regulation because it was an [[intrastate airline]] and thus was subject to less regulation. For that reason, Southwest has never been counted as a legacy carrier. As related below, the term "intrastate airline" meant more than simply operating within a single state. Prior to 1979, Hawaiian Airlines operated only within the state of Hawaii, yet was CAB-regulated.


While the term "legacy carrier" is most often used in a US context, it is possible to speak of legacy carriers elsewhere, since tight airline regulation was once the global norm and following US airline deregulation, many other countries went through some kind of airline deregulation. Non-US carriers with origins that precede liberalization can be viewed as legacy carriers. For instance, in Europe, [[flag carriers]] such as [[British Airways]], [[Lufthansa]] and [[Air France]] (with origins well before the liberalized era) can be viewed as legacy carriers in contrast to airlines such as [[Ryanair]], [[Wizz Air]] and so forth.
Through the mid-20th century, the "Big Four" domestic airlines were [[American Airlines|American]], [[Eastern Air Lines|Eastern]], [[Trans World Airlines|TWA]], and [[United Airlines|United]]. Additionally, [[Pan Am]] focused exclusively on international service and was the unofficial U.S. [[flag carrier]]. Many smaller airlines operated concurrently, and some grew into national airlines in the years surrounding the 1979 deregulation.


==Significance==
* [[Southern Airways]], merged with North Central to become Republic in 1979.
* [[North Central Airlines]], merged with Southern to become Republic in 1979.
* [[National Airlines (1934–1980)|National Airlines]], acquired by Pan Am in 1980.<ref>{{Cite web |title=ATDB.aero aerotransport.org AeroTransport Data Bank |url=http://www.aerotransport.org/php/go.php?query=operator&qstring=National+Airlines&where=74549&luck= |access-date=2020-01-26 |website=www.aerotransport.org}}</ref>
* [[Hughes Airwest]], acquired by Republic in 1980.
* [[Braniff International Airways]], defunct in 1982.
* [[Texas International Airlines]], merged with Continental in 1982.
* [[Frontier Airlines (1950-1986)|Frontier Airlines]], acquired by [[People Express Airlines (1980s)|PEOPLExpress]] in 1985, then merged with Continental in 1986.
* [[Ozark Air Lines]], acquired by TWA in 1986.
* [[Republic Airlines (1979-1986)|Republic Airlines]], merged with Northwest in 1986.
* [[Western Airlines]], merged with Delta in 1987.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hengi, B. I. |title=Airlines remembered : over 200 airlines of the past, described and illustrated in colour |date=2000 |publisher=Midland Pub |others=Lewis, Neil. |isbn=1-85780-091-5 |location=Leicester, England |oclc=44395047}}</ref>
* [[Piedmont Airlines (1948–89)|Piedmont Airlines]], merged with USAir in 1989.<ref>{{Cite web |title=JetPiedmont {{!}}{{!}} T.H. Davis, The Early Years |url=http://jetpiedmont.com/thd/?page=4 |access-date=2020-01-22 |website=jetpiedmont.com}}</ref>
* [[Eastern Air Lines]], defunct in 1991.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Air Transportation: Eastern Airlines |url=http://www.centennialofflight.net/essay/Commercial_Aviation/EasternAirlines/Tran13.htm |access-date=2020-01-22 |website=www.centennialofflight.net}}</ref>
* [[Pan American World Airways]] (Pan Am), defunct in 1991.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2009-05-11 |title=Air Transportation: Pan American: The History of America's "Chosen Instrument" for Overseas Air Transport |url=http://centennialofflight.gov/essay/Commercial_Aviation/Pan_Am/Tran12.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090511190314/http://centennialofflight.gov/essay/Commercial_Aviation/Pan_Am/Tran12.htm |archive-date=2009-05-11 |access-date=2020-01-21}}</ref>


Prior to 1979, the CAB regulated its carriers as a cartel,<ref>{{cite book|last=McCraw|first=Thomas K.|title=Prophets of Regulation|pages=262–265 |isbn=0674716078|publisher=Belknap Press|location=Cambridge, Massachusetts|year=1984|url=https://archive.org/details/prophetsofregula00thom}}</ref> strictly limiting competition between them and setting uniform fare levels nationally. Such fare levels were above those that would prevail in a free market, as proven by comparison with fares charged by less-regulated intrastate carriers during the regulated era.{{sfn|McCraw|1984|p=267}} CAB carriers thus entered deregulation with a legacy of high costs. The history of the legacy carriers following deregulation is in significant part the story of their struggle with this legacy, their efforts to cut costs and to compensate for such costs with through various business model adaptations. One indication of this long-term struggle is that of the surviving US legacy carriers, all have gone through bankruptcy since 1978 with the exception of [[Alaska Airlines]].
By the end of 1991, there were seven remaining transcontinental legacy carriers: [[American Airlines|American]], [[Continental Airlines|Continental]], [[Delta Air Lines|Delta]], [[Northwest Airlines|Northwest]], [[Trans World Airlines|TWA]], [[United Airlines|United]], and [[US Airways]]. These seven stood for a decade until TWA was incorporated into American in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.stlmag.com/St-Louis-Magazine/October-2005/TWA-Death-Of-A-Legend/|title=TWA - Death Of A Legend|last=Grant|first=Elaine X.|date=2006-07-28|website=www.stlmag.com|language=en-us|access-date=2020-01-21}}</ref>


==Context==
The remaining six subsequently stood for nearly another decade, but with mounting financial losses, four (Delta, Northwest, US Airways and United Airlines) were under [[Chapter 11, Title 11, United States Code|Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection]] by 2005, setting off several years of mergers and acquisitions.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Day That 4 American Legacy Carriers Went Bankrupt |url=https://www.aerotime.aero/rytis.beresnevicius/23050-day-4-american-carriers-bankrupt |access-date=2020-01-20 |website=www.aerotime.aero |language=en}}</ref>
A complete list of CAB-regulated scheduled airlines in 1978, the last year of the regulated era, is available in the [[Civil Aeronautics Board#1978 CAB scheduled carriers|Civil Aeronautics Board]] article. Those are the legacy carriers as of the start of the deregulated era. For completeness, there is also a list of the [[Civil Aeronautics Board#Supplemental air carriers|charter carriers]] from the same year (known as "supplemental air carriers"). Whether the supplemental airlines count as legacy carriers is largely moot since they had little impact on the industry after deregulation.


Of the 1978 scheduled passenger CAB carriers, as shown in the table referenced above, 23 flew jets:
US Airways was purchased by [[America West Airlines]] in a 2005 [[reverse merger]], acquiring the assets and branding of the larger US Airways while putting the America West leadership team largely in charge of the merged airline.
* 10 domestic [[trunk carrier]]s ([[American Airlines|American]], [[Braniff Airways|Braniff]], [[Continental Airlines|Continental]], [[Delta Air Lines|Delta]], [[Eastern Air Lines|Eastern]], [[National Airlines (1934–1980)|National]], [[Northwest Airlines|Northwest]], [[Trans World Airlines|TWA]], [[United Airlines|United]], [[Western Airlines|Western]]) plus [[Pan Am]]
* eight [[local service carrier]]s ([[Allegheny Airlines|Allegheny]], [[Frontier Airlines (1950–1986)|Frontier]], [[Hughes Airwest]], [[North Central Airlines|North Central]], [[Ozark Air Lines|Ozark]], [[Piedmont Airlines (1948–1989)|Piedmont]], [[Southern Airways|Southern]], [[Texas International Airlines|Texas International]])
* the two Hawaiian carriers: [[Hawaiian Airlines|Hawaiian]] and [[Aloha Airlines|Aloha]]
* two of the Alaskan carriers: [[Alaska Airlines]] and [[Wien Air Alaska]]


===Airlines not regulated by the CAB===
United emerged from bankruptcy in 2006 and almost immediately began discussions to merge with Continental Airlines. Those talks fell through in 2008, leading United to turn to US Airways for combination talks, which also failed. Ultimately in 2010, Continental agreed to merge with United, with the combined airline taking the United name.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.chron.com/neighborhood/bellaire/news/article/Two-mega-airlines-are-United-Continental-is-no-9340562.php|title=Two mega-airlines are United: Continental is no more|date=2012-03-03|website=Houston Chronicle|access-date=2020-01-21}}</ref>
{{main|Intrastate airline}}
During the 1938–1978 regulated era, intrastate airlines were those that minimized participation in [[interstate commerce]], most obviously by operating only within a single state, but also by measures such as not selling joint tickets with other carriers for itineraries that crossed state lines, not selling tickets in other states and so forth. Despite not flying outside of Hawaii, [[Hawaiian Airlines]] and [[Aloha Airlines]] were CAB-regulated carriers during this era, and participated in the interstate airline system by, for instance, selling connecting tickets to elsewhere in the US. For many reasons, neither airline was an intrastate carrier. For instance, it was determined in the courts that an intrastate carrier was essentially legally impossible in Hawaii. Federally-controlled waters start three miles offshore, making most flights between islands subject to federal jurisdiction.
{{main|History of Southwest Airlines}}
Southwest started operations in 1971 and from 1971 thru 1978 was a Texas intrastate carrier, escaping CAB regulation. It was, in a sense, a carrier that was deregulated even before deregulation. Other important intrastate carriers included [[Pacific Southwest Airlines]], [[Air California]] (later AirCal) and [[Air Florida]], none of which survived the 1980s.
{{main|Civil Aeronautics Board#Air Taxis}}
While the CAB was legally unable to regulate intrastate carriers, from 1952, it chose not to regulate airlines flying "small" aircraft, leading to the growth of a deregulated air taxi or commuter airline segment decades before wider deregulation. Any US airline that was a commuter carrier before 1979 therefore also escaped CAB regulation.
{{main|SkyWest Airlines}}
A prominent example of a CAB-era commuter carrier survives today: the large regional airline SkyWest, which first started operating in 1972 as a commuter carrier.
{{main|Empire Airlines (1974–1986)}}
One CAB-era commuter airline made a post-deregulation impact at a mainline level and merged into a legacy carrier: Empire Airlines started in the mid-1970s as a commuter airline in [[Upstate New York]], before being certificated in 1979 and transitioning to jets shortly thereafter. It merged into Piedmont in 1986.


===Legacy carrier post-deregulation adaptation===
Delta and Northwest emerged from bankruptcy in 2007. During the bankruptcy process, Delta was the target of a [[Hostile takeover|hostile takeover attempt]] by [[US Airways]]. Delta and Northwest agreed to merge in 2008, citing substantial efficiencies.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Delta reaches deal on Minnesota jobs |url=https://www.bizjournals.com/twincities/stories/2008/12/15/daily14.html |access-date=10 April 2021 |website=www.bizjournals.com}}</ref>
1979–1991 was a highly turbulent time for legacy airlines – during this time 13 of the original 23 passenger jet legacy carriers vanished through merger and collapse as they struggled to adapt to the new environment. During this period, many legacy airline features developed as an adaptation to deregulation. Legacy carrier strategies included:
* Mergers. By the end of the 1980s, two of the 10 former [[trunk carrier]]s had merged out of existence (National into Pan Am and Western into Delta) as had seven of the eight former [[local service carrier]]s: Frontier and Texas International into Continental<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/image/192510215 ''Airlines' merger takes effect'', Green Bay (WI) Press-Gazette, 31 October 1982]</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Petzinger|first=Thomas, Jr.|title=Hard Landing: The Epic Contest For Power and Profits That Plunged the Airlines into Chaos|publisher=[[Random House]]|year= 1996|isbn=9780307774491|pages=321–322}}</ref>; Hughes, North Central and Southern into Republic<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1979/08/30/archives/corporate-sales-and-earnings-reports.html ''Corporate Sales and Earnings Reports'', New York Times, 30 August 1979]</ref><ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1979/08/30/archives/corporate-sales-and-earnings-reports.html ''Corporate Sales and Earnings Reports'', New York Times, 30 August 1979]</ref> which merged into Northwest<ref>{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=TJ8oAAAAIBAJ&pg=7034,3475617|newspaper=Deseret News|agency=UPI|title=Northwest Orient will buy Republic to become third largest airline|date=January 24, 1986|page=4A}}</ref>; Ozark merged into TWA<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/image/461230853 ''Ozark Air and TWA merge'', San Francisco Examiner, 2 March 1986]</ref>; and Piedmont into USAir.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Salpukas |first=Agis |date=1987-03-10 |title=PIEDMONT ACCEPTS USAIR BID |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1987/03/10/business/piedmont-accepts-usair-bid.html |url-access=subscription |access-date= |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> Some of these mergers were motivated by desires to reduce competition and were judged anticompetitive by the US government before nonetheless being approved by the US Department of Transportation.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1986/08/01/business/company-news-us-agency-clears-sale-of-republic-air.html ''U.S. Agency Clears Sale of Republic Air'', New York Times, 1 August 1986]</ref><ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1987/10/31/business/us-approves-merger-of-usair-and-piedmont.html ''U.S. Approves Merger Of USAir and Piedmont'', New York Times, 31 October 1987]</ref>
* Expansion: All other things being equal, airline expansion drives down average costs by reducing average employee seniority (as new employees are hired), so average employee pay drops. An example of successful post-deregulation expansion was Piedmont, which expanded up and down the east coast and was profitable every year after deregulation until it merged into USAir.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1986/08/31/business/now-even-piedmont-flies-the-fast-lane.html ''Now Even Piedmont Flies In The Fast Lane'', 31 August 1986]</ref> The rapid expansion of Braniff, on the other hand, lead to its collapse in 1982,<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1982/12/25/business/braniff-s-putnam-faces-the-death-of-an-airline.html ''Braniff's Putnam Faces The Death Of An Airline'', New York Times, 25 December 1982]</ref> the first legacy jet carrier to cease operation (the first former CAB carrier overall to cease operation was turboprop airline [[Air New England (1970–1981)|Air New England]] in 1981).<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/image/137805561 ''Airline serving City going out of business'', Rochester (NY) Democrat and Chronicle, October 23, 1981]</ref>
* Use of bankruptcy law to abrogate labor agreements and impose lower market wages as pursued by Continental Airlines in its 1983 bankruptcy.{{sfn|Petzinger|1996|p=208–216}}
* Lower pay scales for new hires (retaining higher pay scales for legacy employees), as pioneered by American Airlines in 1983.{{sfn|Petzinger|1996|p=131}}<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/image/336514758 ''American Airlines flies with financial strength'', Tampa Tribune, 8 December 1983]</ref>
* Loyalty programs. Frequent flyer programs as we know them did not exist prior to the introduction of the American Advantage frequent flyer club by American Airlines in 1981. This allowed legacy carriers to leverage their greater size.{{sfn|Petzinger|1996|p=139–141}}
* Development of complex fare structures overseen by revenue management programs, including reliance on price discrimination (selling the same seat for much more to a price-insensitive business traveler, and much less to price-sensitive personal travelers through mechanisms such as an advanced nonrefundable purchase, a required round-trip purchase with a Saturday night stay to obtain the lowest prices) - again, led by American in 1985.{{sfn|Petzinger|1996|p=270–273}}
* Hub-and-spoke systems. Delta had a well-developed Atlanta hub prior to 1979,<ref>{{cite book|title=Delta: The History of an Airline|first1=W. David|last1=Lewis|last2=Newton|first2=Wesley Phillips|publisher=University of Georgia Press|location=Athens, Georgia|year=1979|page=398|isbn=9780820304656|url=https://archive.org/details/deltahistoryofai0000lewi}}</ref> and the advantages of hubs were understood by many, but most airlines did not have the opportunity to develop hub-and-spoke systems prior to deregulation in 1979 because they could only fly where the CAB let them. Thus hubs were, for the most part, a post-deregulation development.{{sfn|Petzinger|1996|p=419–420}}
* International expansion: pre-deregulation the domestic [[trunk airline]]s were largely that – mostly domestically focused. Legacy carriers made a concerted effort to expand internationally, since such flights were important to business travelers and less subject to low-cost competition. United bought Pan Am's Pacific routes,<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1985/04/23/business/pan-am-plans-sale-of-pacific-routes-to-united-airlines.html ''Pan Am Plans Sale Of Pacific Routes To United Airlines'', New York Times, 23 April 1985]</ref> American bought Eastern's Latin American routes (previously those of Braniff before it collapsed),<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1990/06/29/business/american-s-big-plans-for-new-latin-routes.html ''American's Big Plans For New Latin Routes'', New York Times, 29 June 1990]</ref> Delta bought Pan Am European routes and so forth.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1991/08/12/business/pan-am-creditors-back-1.7-billion-offer-from-delta.html ''Pan Am Creditors Back $1.7 Billion Offer From Delta'', New York Times, 12 August 1991]</ref>
* Alignment of commuter airlines (later called regional airlines) with legacy carriers. Allegheny pioneered this in the 1960s in the CAB era, developing the Allegheny Commuter system of commuter carriers under common branding and liveries.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Davies|first1=R.E.G.|last2=Quastler|first2=I.E.|author-link=R. E. G. Davies|author-link2=Imre E. Quastler|title=Commuter Airlines of the United States|isbn=9781560984047|publisher=Smithsonian Institution Press|year=1995|location=Washington, DC|pages=55–57|url=https://archive.org/details/commuterairlines0000davi|ref={{sfnref|Davies-Quastler|1996}}}}</ref> For Allegheny it was in part a way to cease operating smaller routes itself. In the mid-1980s, the government permitted legacy carriers to code-share with commuters. This resulted in the quick alignment of commuters with legacy carriers as it became difficult for independent commuter carriers to survive, with commuters taking on the identity of the legacies with whom they were aligned. Some carriers, like American and Continental, bought some of the commuters with which they aligned.{{sfn|Davies-Quastler|1996|p=134–150}}
Eastern and Pan Am proved unable to adapt, each collapsing in 1991.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1991/01/19/business/eastern-airlines-is-shutting-down-and-plans-to-liquidate-its-assets.html ''Eastern Airlines Is Shutting Down And Plans to Liquidate Its Assets'', New York Times, 19 January 1991]</ref><ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1991/12/05/business/its-cash-depleted-pan-am-shuts.html ''Its Cash Depleted, Pan Am Shuts'', New York Times, 5 December 1991]</ref> Including the earlier shutdowns of Braniff in 1982 (see above) and Wien Air Alaska in 1984,<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1984/11/03/business/wien-air-halts-its-operations.html ''Wien Air Halts Operations'', New York Times, 3 November 1984]</ref> by 1991, four former CAB jet passenger airlines ceased operating. Added to the nine legacy jet carriers that merged and 13 of the 23 CAB legacy jet passenger airlines exited by 1991, leaving only 10 left, of which three were small (Alaska, Aloha and Hawaiian):
{{col div}}
* Alaska
* Aloha
* American
* Continental
* Delta
* Hawaiian
* Northwest
* TWA
* United
* USAir
{{col div end}}
===From ten in 1991 to five today===
* In 2001, bankrupt TWA merged into American Airlines.<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/image/142053357/ ''American takes over with fanfare, a few jitters'', St Louis Post-Dispatch, 10 April 2001]</ref>
* In 2005, bankrupt US Airways was bought by America West, which adopted the name of the larger carrier. The resulting carrier was considered a legacy airline, given its heritage was a majority legacy carrier.<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/image/125903095/ ''Airline employees switch gear to US Airways name'', Arizona Republic, 28 September 2005]</ref>
* In 2008 Aloha collapsed.<ref>{{cite news|last=McAvoy|first=Audrey| url=https://www.seattletimes.com/life/travel/hawaiis-aloha-airlines-halting-all-passenger-service/|title=Aloha Airlines halting passenger service|agency=[[Associated Press]]|via=[[Seattle Times]]|date=March 30, 2008}}</ref>
* In 2008 Northwest agreed to merge with Delta.<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/image/232381101 ''Delta, Northwest connect'', Chicago Tribune, 15 April 2008]</ref>
* In 2010 Continental agreed to merge with United.<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/image/232917085 ''United, Continental connect'', Chicago Tribune, 3 May 2010]</ref>
* In 2013 US Airways agreed to buy bankrupt American Airlines, but adopted the name and headquarters of the larger carrier.<ref>[https://archive.nytimes.com/dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/02/13/american-and-us-airways-said-to-vote-for-merger/ ''American and US Airways Announce Deal for $11 Billion Merger'', New York Times, 13 February 2013]</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 22:41, 25 July 2024

In the United States, a legacy carrier is an airline that was once economically regulated by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) during the period of airline regulation 1938–1978 or can trace its origin to one that did. The CAB was a now defunct federal agency that tightly controlled almost all US commercial air transport during that period. As related below, many features associated with the legacy airline business model were actually developed not during the regulated era, but instead in the first decade or so of the deregulated era, as legacy carriers adapted to an unfamiliar competitive environment.

As of 2024 there are five surviving legacy carriers, but note that Alaska and Hawaiian are currently seeking approval for a merger:[1]

Legacy carriers do not include:

  • Any airline founded after the regulated era. A few prominent examples of such carriers include America West Airlines, ValuJet, JetBlue and Spirit Airlines.
  • Any US airline with a pre-1979 origin which was not regulated by the CAB. There are two significant US airlines today that operated pre-1979 but were not regulated by the CAB. The most prominent is Southwest Airlines, which started operations in 1971 but was never subject to CAB regulation because it was an intrastate airline and thus was subject to less regulation. For that reason, Southwest has never been counted as a legacy carrier. As related below, the term "intrastate airline" meant more than simply operating within a single state. Prior to 1979, Hawaiian Airlines operated only within the state of Hawaii, yet was CAB-regulated.

While the term "legacy carrier" is most often used in a US context, it is possible to speak of legacy carriers elsewhere, since tight airline regulation was once the global norm and following US airline deregulation, many other countries went through some kind of airline deregulation. Non-US carriers with origins that precede liberalization can be viewed as legacy carriers. For instance, in Europe, flag carriers such as British Airways, Lufthansa and Air France (with origins well before the liberalized era) can be viewed as legacy carriers in contrast to airlines such as Ryanair, Wizz Air and so forth.

Significance

Prior to 1979, the CAB regulated its carriers as a cartel,[2] strictly limiting competition between them and setting uniform fare levels nationally. Such fare levels were above those that would prevail in a free market, as proven by comparison with fares charged by less-regulated intrastate carriers during the regulated era.[3] CAB carriers thus entered deregulation with a legacy of high costs. The history of the legacy carriers following deregulation is in significant part the story of their struggle with this legacy, their efforts to cut costs and to compensate for such costs with through various business model adaptations. One indication of this long-term struggle is that of the surviving US legacy carriers, all have gone through bankruptcy since 1978 with the exception of Alaska Airlines.

Context

A complete list of CAB-regulated scheduled airlines in 1978, the last year of the regulated era, is available in the Civil Aeronautics Board article. Those are the legacy carriers as of the start of the deregulated era. For completeness, there is also a list of the charter carriers from the same year (known as "supplemental air carriers"). Whether the supplemental airlines count as legacy carriers is largely moot since they had little impact on the industry after deregulation.

Of the 1978 scheduled passenger CAB carriers, as shown in the table referenced above, 23 flew jets:

Airlines not regulated by the CAB

During the 1938–1978 regulated era, intrastate airlines were those that minimized participation in interstate commerce, most obviously by operating only within a single state, but also by measures such as not selling joint tickets with other carriers for itineraries that crossed state lines, not selling tickets in other states and so forth. Despite not flying outside of Hawaii, Hawaiian Airlines and Aloha Airlines were CAB-regulated carriers during this era, and participated in the interstate airline system by, for instance, selling connecting tickets to elsewhere in the US. For many reasons, neither airline was an intrastate carrier. For instance, it was determined in the courts that an intrastate carrier was essentially legally impossible in Hawaii. Federally-controlled waters start three miles offshore, making most flights between islands subject to federal jurisdiction.

Southwest started operations in 1971 and from 1971 thru 1978 was a Texas intrastate carrier, escaping CAB regulation. It was, in a sense, a carrier that was deregulated even before deregulation. Other important intrastate carriers included Pacific Southwest Airlines, Air California (later AirCal) and Air Florida, none of which survived the 1980s.

While the CAB was legally unable to regulate intrastate carriers, from 1952, it chose not to regulate airlines flying "small" aircraft, leading to the growth of a deregulated air taxi or commuter airline segment decades before wider deregulation. Any US airline that was a commuter carrier before 1979 therefore also escaped CAB regulation.

A prominent example of a CAB-era commuter carrier survives today: the large regional airline SkyWest, which first started operating in 1972 as a commuter carrier.

One CAB-era commuter airline made a post-deregulation impact at a mainline level and merged into a legacy carrier: Empire Airlines started in the mid-1970s as a commuter airline in Upstate New York, before being certificated in 1979 and transitioning to jets shortly thereafter. It merged into Piedmont in 1986.

Legacy carrier post-deregulation adaptation

1979–1991 was a highly turbulent time for legacy airlines – during this time 13 of the original 23 passenger jet legacy carriers vanished through merger and collapse as they struggled to adapt to the new environment. During this period, many legacy airline features developed as an adaptation to deregulation. Legacy carrier strategies included:

  • Mergers. By the end of the 1980s, two of the 10 former trunk carriers had merged out of existence (National into Pan Am and Western into Delta) as had seven of the eight former local service carriers: Frontier and Texas International into Continental[4][5]; Hughes, North Central and Southern into Republic[6][7] which merged into Northwest[8]; Ozark merged into TWA[9]; and Piedmont into USAir.[10] Some of these mergers were motivated by desires to reduce competition and were judged anticompetitive by the US government before nonetheless being approved by the US Department of Transportation.[11][12]
  • Expansion: All other things being equal, airline expansion drives down average costs by reducing average employee seniority (as new employees are hired), so average employee pay drops. An example of successful post-deregulation expansion was Piedmont, which expanded up and down the east coast and was profitable every year after deregulation until it merged into USAir.[13] The rapid expansion of Braniff, on the other hand, lead to its collapse in 1982,[14] the first legacy jet carrier to cease operation (the first former CAB carrier overall to cease operation was turboprop airline Air New England in 1981).[15]
  • Use of bankruptcy law to abrogate labor agreements and impose lower market wages as pursued by Continental Airlines in its 1983 bankruptcy.[16]
  • Lower pay scales for new hires (retaining higher pay scales for legacy employees), as pioneered by American Airlines in 1983.[17][18]
  • Loyalty programs. Frequent flyer programs as we know them did not exist prior to the introduction of the American Advantage frequent flyer club by American Airlines in 1981. This allowed legacy carriers to leverage their greater size.[19]
  • Development of complex fare structures overseen by revenue management programs, including reliance on price discrimination (selling the same seat for much more to a price-insensitive business traveler, and much less to price-sensitive personal travelers through mechanisms such as an advanced nonrefundable purchase, a required round-trip purchase with a Saturday night stay to obtain the lowest prices) - again, led by American in 1985.[20]
  • Hub-and-spoke systems. Delta had a well-developed Atlanta hub prior to 1979,[21] and the advantages of hubs were understood by many, but most airlines did not have the opportunity to develop hub-and-spoke systems prior to deregulation in 1979 because they could only fly where the CAB let them. Thus hubs were, for the most part, a post-deregulation development.[22]
  • International expansion: pre-deregulation the domestic trunk airlines were largely that – mostly domestically focused. Legacy carriers made a concerted effort to expand internationally, since such flights were important to business travelers and less subject to low-cost competition. United bought Pan Am's Pacific routes,[23] American bought Eastern's Latin American routes (previously those of Braniff before it collapsed),[24] Delta bought Pan Am European routes and so forth.[25]
  • Alignment of commuter airlines (later called regional airlines) with legacy carriers. Allegheny pioneered this in the 1960s in the CAB era, developing the Allegheny Commuter system of commuter carriers under common branding and liveries.[26] For Allegheny it was in part a way to cease operating smaller routes itself. In the mid-1980s, the government permitted legacy carriers to code-share with commuters. This resulted in the quick alignment of commuters with legacy carriers as it became difficult for independent commuter carriers to survive, with commuters taking on the identity of the legacies with whom they were aligned. Some carriers, like American and Continental, bought some of the commuters with which they aligned.[27]

Eastern and Pan Am proved unable to adapt, each collapsing in 1991.[28][29] Including the earlier shutdowns of Braniff in 1982 (see above) and Wien Air Alaska in 1984,[30] by 1991, four former CAB jet passenger airlines ceased operating. Added to the nine legacy jet carriers that merged and 13 of the 23 CAB legacy jet passenger airlines exited by 1991, leaving only 10 left, of which three were small (Alaska, Aloha and Hawaiian):

  • Alaska
  • Aloha
  • American
  • Continental
  • Delta
  • Hawaiian
  • Northwest
  • TWA
  • United
  • USAir

From ten in 1991 to five today

  • In 2001, bankrupt TWA merged into American Airlines.[31]
  • In 2005, bankrupt US Airways was bought by America West, which adopted the name of the larger carrier. The resulting carrier was considered a legacy airline, given its heritage was a majority legacy carrier.[32]
  • In 2008 Aloha collapsed.[33]
  • In 2008 Northwest agreed to merge with Delta.[34]
  • In 2010 Continental agreed to merge with United.[35]
  • In 2013 US Airways agreed to buy bankrupt American Airlines, but adopted the name and headquarters of the larger carrier.[36]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Alaska Air to buy Hawaiian Airlines in a $1.9 billion deal that may attract regulator scrutiny". apnews.com. Associated Press. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  2. ^ McCraw, Thomas K. (1984). Prophets of Regulation. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press. pp. 262–265. ISBN 0674716078.
  3. ^ McCraw 1984, p. 267.
  4. ^ Airlines' merger takes effect, Green Bay (WI) Press-Gazette, 31 October 1982
  5. ^ Petzinger, Thomas, Jr. (1996). Hard Landing: The Epic Contest For Power and Profits That Plunged the Airlines into Chaos. Random House. pp. 321–322. ISBN 9780307774491.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Corporate Sales and Earnings Reports, New York Times, 30 August 1979
  7. ^ Corporate Sales and Earnings Reports, New York Times, 30 August 1979
  8. ^ "Northwest Orient will buy Republic to become third largest airline". Deseret News. UPI. January 24, 1986. p. 4A.
  9. ^ Ozark Air and TWA merge, San Francisco Examiner, 2 March 1986
  10. ^ Salpukas, Agis (1987-03-10). "PIEDMONT ACCEPTS USAIR BID". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  11. ^ U.S. Agency Clears Sale of Republic Air, New York Times, 1 August 1986
  12. ^ U.S. Approves Merger Of USAir and Piedmont, New York Times, 31 October 1987
  13. ^ Now Even Piedmont Flies In The Fast Lane, 31 August 1986
  14. ^ Braniff's Putnam Faces The Death Of An Airline, New York Times, 25 December 1982
  15. ^ Airline serving City going out of business, Rochester (NY) Democrat and Chronicle, October 23, 1981
  16. ^ Petzinger 1996, p. 208–216.
  17. ^ Petzinger 1996, p. 131.
  18. ^ American Airlines flies with financial strength, Tampa Tribune, 8 December 1983
  19. ^ Petzinger 1996, p. 139–141.
  20. ^ Petzinger 1996, p. 270–273.
  21. ^ Lewis, W. David; Newton, Wesley Phillips (1979). Delta: The History of an Airline. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. p. 398. ISBN 9780820304656.
  22. ^ Petzinger 1996, p. 419–420.
  23. ^ Pan Am Plans Sale Of Pacific Routes To United Airlines, New York Times, 23 April 1985
  24. ^ American's Big Plans For New Latin Routes, New York Times, 29 June 1990
  25. ^ Pan Am Creditors Back $1.7 Billion Offer From Delta, New York Times, 12 August 1991
  26. ^ Davies, R.E.G.; Quastler, I.E. (1995). Commuter Airlines of the United States. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press. pp. 55–57. ISBN 9781560984047.
  27. ^ Davies-Quastler 1996, p. 134–150.
  28. ^ Eastern Airlines Is Shutting Down And Plans to Liquidate Its Assets, New York Times, 19 January 1991
  29. ^ Its Cash Depleted, Pan Am Shuts, New York Times, 5 December 1991
  30. ^ Wien Air Halts Operations, New York Times, 3 November 1984
  31. ^ American takes over with fanfare, a few jitters, St Louis Post-Dispatch, 10 April 2001
  32. ^ Airline employees switch gear to US Airways name, Arizona Republic, 28 September 2005
  33. ^ McAvoy, Audrey (March 30, 2008). "Aloha Airlines halting passenger service". Associated Press – via Seattle Times.
  34. ^ Delta, Northwest connect, Chicago Tribune, 15 April 2008
  35. ^ United, Continental connect, Chicago Tribune, 3 May 2010
  36. ^ American and US Airways Announce Deal for $11 Billion Merger, New York Times, 13 February 2013