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of 5.4% compared to February 2013. Although this represented a slowdown compared to the January traffic increase of 8.2%, cumulative traffic growth for the first two months of 2014 was 6.9%, which compares favorably with the 5.2% overall growth achieved in 2013.
February capacity rose 5.2% and load factor climbed 0.2 percentage points to 78.1%. All regions except Africa experienced positive traffic growth.
“People are flying. Strong demand is consistent with the pick-up in global economic growth, particularly in advanced economies,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
International passenger markets
February international passenger traffic rose 5.5% compared to the year-ago period. Capacity rose 5.8% and load factor slipped 0.2 percentage points to 76.8%. All regions recorded year-over-year increases in demand.
nEuropean carriers’ international traffic climbed 5.8% in February compared to the year-ago period, the strongest growth among the three largest regions. Capacity rose 5.7% and load factor was stable at 77.4%. Growth in the manufacturing and services sectors has now reached rates not seen since the first half of 2013, according to JPMorgan/Markit’s surveys of purchasing managers, and growth is also occurring in major economies like France.
a key engine of growth and job creation,” said Tyler.
Last month, the UK government recognised the principle that its onerous Air Passenger Duty (APD) was hurting the UK’s economic prospects — particularly its ties with emerging economies such as China, India and Brazil. From next April, the highest bands will be eliminated. This followed reductions agreed last year to address the economic damage that APD was doing to Northern Ireland. But despite these adjustments, planned annual inflation-related increases continue.
“This latest effort is half-hearted at best. Instead of immediately addressing the economic damage of this misguided tax, the government will eliminate the highest bands from next year. The APD is a drag on the UK economy that far outweighs even the billions of pounds that it siphons from the pockets of travelers. The government’s tinkering pays little more than lip service to this fact. It’s time for decisive action. Taxing a necessity like connectivity as if it were a social indulgence hurts the economy. A comprehensive review is needed,” said Tyler.