Only bankruptcy can end the PIA crisis
The government can cut down annual losses of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) by two-thirds — from about Rs60 billion to Rs20bn per annum — and secure jobs of the employees at the same time by taking the following two actions.
One, declare PIA bankrupt and raise another airline with a slightly different brand name in the private sector, with the government’s stake of no more than 26 per cent.
Two, send existing permanent employees home on leave with full pay until they attain the age of 60 and, thereafter, give them normal pension benefits.
Declaring the national airline bankrupt and raising another one with a slightly different brand name can save taxpayers billions of rupees every year
PIA is already bankrupt with over Rs360bn in negative equity. Therefore, doing so would be perfectly in line with legal and corporate practice. PIA’s losses for 2016 and 2017 were Rs45.4bn and Rs45bn, respectively.
Operating a government-owned airline profitably in a deregulated air transport environment is an unachievable target. Had this been possible, British Airways, Lufthansa, KLM, Air France or other airlines in Europe, North/South America, Africa, Far East and Australia would not have been privatised following the deregulation by the United States in 1978.
The simple explanation is that government-owned entities cannot compete with private ones on price and quality in a highly competitive market. Gone are the days when national airlines were protected from competition in not only the domestic but also international markets — a situation that existed worldwide between 1944 and 1978.
In Pakistan, the airline industry was deregulated in 1992. And that was the time PIA should have been privatised to save it from becoming a perpetually loss-making government entity.
The problem of successive governments has been the political economy. Every political party worth its salt has a union in PIA. You could count at least five of them, which are just as active as their parent political parties. Pilots, engineers and other administrative groups also maintain pressure groups in the name of associations, seeking perks and privileges unimaginable in private airlines.
It would be a fallacy to say that PIA could not be privatised because it had to serve some larger national or public interest except to save about 18,000 jobs. But jobs would have been saved by newly established private airlines as well, including PIA (Private) Limited.
It is often quoted that over-staffing is the reason for PIA’s continued losses. But the labour cost is not the real problem of PIA. It is just as much as in other airlines in Asia Pacific on average (18pc).