Effects of high-speed rail and airline cooperation under hub airport capacity constraint
February 10, 2014
This paper analyzes the effects of cooperation between a hub-and-spoke
airline and a high-speed rail (HSR) operator when the hub airport may be
capacity-constrained. We find that such cooperation reduces traffic in
markets where prior modal competition occurs, but may increase traffic
in other markets of the network. The cooperation improves welfare,
independent of whether or not the hub capacity is constrained, as long
as the modal substitutability in the overlapping markets is low.
However, if the modal substitutability is high, then hub capacity plays
an important role in assessing the welfare impact: If the hub airports
are significantly capacity-constrained, the cooperation improves
welfare; otherwise, it is likely welfare reducing. Through simulations
we further study the welfare effects of modal asymmetries in the demands
and costs, heterogeneous passenger types, and economies of traffic
density. Our analysis shows that the economies of traffic density alone
cannot justify airline–HSR cooperation.