Skift Take

Airline executives have been bullish in recent months about corporate travel continuing to make progress in its recovery. But surging airfares for business travel are poised to keep making Zoom meetings more appealing for corporations, based on a new forecast from Amex GBT.

Airfares on key corporate travel routes are expected to rise by as much as 25 percent in 2023 amid high fuel prices, a stronger U.S. dollar and labour and aircraft shortages, a forecast from American Express Global Business Travel (Amex GBT) showed.

The biggest gains are expected in economy class on routes between Australia and Asia, in business class on Australian domestic flights and those to New Zealand, as well as in economy class on Asia-Europe flights.

The cost of economy class flights within North America will rise by a more muted 3 percent and within Europe by 5.5 percent as capacity cuts during the pandemic are restored.

“Following significant price increases in 2022, fare rises in the competitive North America air sector are likely to be of a smaller degree than those forecast for Europe and Asia Pacific,” Amex GBT said on Thursday.

Flights from Asia to Europe are being forced to take longer routes in many cases as airlines avoid Russian airspace due to its war with Ukraine.

On a Tokyo-London flight, the change in route can add nearly 2.5 hours of flying time and a 20 percent increase in fuel burned, Amex GBT said, contributing to a forecast 14.5 percent rise in Asia-Europe economy class fares in 2023.

In Australia, the country’s competition regulator said on Tuesday that average domestic airline revenues per passenger were 27 percent higher in October than in the same month of 2019 because of capacity constraints, high oil prices and operational challenges.

Amex GBT said global airline capacity in 2023 was expected to recover to 92 percent of 2019 levels.

Airlines group IATA forecast on Tuesday that carriers would post an industry-wide profit next year, the first since 2019, due in part to rising fares.

(Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

This article was written by Jamie Freed from Reuters and was legally licensed through the Industry Dive Content Marketplace. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].

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Tags: airfares, airlines, business travel, corporate travel, travel recovery

Photo credit: Airfares on key business travel routes are expected to surge in 2023 Jacobs Stock Photography Ltd / Getty Images

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