Air Accessibility and Growth - The Economic Effects of A Capacity Expansion at Vienna International Airport
Air Accessibility and Growth - The Economic Effects of A Capacity Expansion at Vienna International Airport
Air Accessibility and Growth - The Economic Effects of A Capacity Expansion at Vienna International Airport
a b s t r a c t
JEL classification: We use an econometric endogenous growth model to estimate the impact of air accessibility on GDP and
C23 investment growth. This is done in a dynamic panel system estimation framework for the EU-15 between
L93
1993 and 2006. The results are then used to predict the economic effects of an increase in capacity at the
O11
Vienna International Airport using actual forecasts of the required information set. We find a GDP
Keywords:
elasticity of air accessibility of 0.014 and an investment elasticity of 0.05 for our sample. Given the official
Air accessibility elasticities
Econometric estimation passenger forecast this would lead to additional GDP growth in Austria of accumulated 0.81% based on
Airport capacity expansion the values of the restricted scenario (no third runway). In a more conservative forecast scenario of 3%
Vienna annual passenger growth, a third runway is projected to increase GDP by 0.2% by 2040.
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doi:10.1016/j.jairtraman.2010.04.003
326 R. Sellner, P. Nagl / Journal of Air Transport Management 16 (2010) 325e329
investment, trade, tourism and productivity via a supply-side Dyi;t1 is the one period time lag of the dependent variable, D being
approach. The catalytic approach evaluates the improvements of the one year difference operator and e is an i.i.d. disturbance term.
the location factor, the better international accessibility and access To model the impact of air accessibility on investments, the
to production factors (allocation efficiency improvements) and the following investment equation is added to the system:
stimulus to R&D and education by a better international exchange
of tacit knowledge. New firms, generated employment, higher X
15
Airlines’, after its merger with Lauda Air in 1999, started a massive International Airport the reasoning behind an expectation of
expansion of services, with particular focus on Eastern Europe. The growth rates above the structural growth rate of air transport is
result has been a sustained period of growth in the number of questionable for three reasons. (1) The ‘catching up’-effect of the
passengers making Vienna International Airport the airport with economies in Eastern Europe can be expected to slow down as they
the most destinations in Eastern Europe, even more than Frankfurt will reach higher levels of economic saturation. (2) By the end of
or Munich. (2) Vienna International Airport also benefits from 2008 Lufthansa announced a takeover bid for Austrian Airlines. If
a significantly enlarged catchment area after the fall of the iron this deal materializes, the speed of the expansion of Austrian
curtain in 1989. For people from western Slovakia and Hungary as Airlines will be different from in the past, where Austrian Airlines’
well as from southern Czech Republic Vienna International Airport expansion was driven by competition to make their network more
became the closest international airport. (3) Vienna International attractive than those of other airlines, in particular Lufthansa. (3)
Airport has been able to attract a high number of low cost carriers, The growth of low cost airlines can be anticipated to lose some of
with three of them (Air Berlin, FlyNiki and Sky Europe) having main the verve of the pioneering years. One of the low cost carriers, Sky
bases in Vienna International Airport. The share in passengers of Europe, went bankrupt in September 2009.
low cost airlines in Vienna International Airport is a 23.3% in 2008, In addition, the short term effect of the economic crisis has to be
which is significantly higher than most of other airports of taken into account. Vienna International Airport estimates that from
comparable size, e.g. Munich (16%), Copenhagen (14%), Zurich (11%) 2008 to 2009 passenger volumes are expected to go down by 5%.
or Brussels (3%). We therefore propose two scenarios for the CAGR: A more
The current long-term forecasts for Vienna International Airport optimistic scenario (official forecast scenario) which is in line with
presume a CAGR of 5.4% (taken from Kaufmann, 2008) for the assumptions of Vienna International Airport and the more
passenger volume until 2020. This figure is derived from an pessimistic scenario (conservative forecast scenario), which
extrapolation of the long-term growth rate. However, a compre- assumes a lower growth rate of 3% per annum. In each of the two
hensive forecast should go further than a simple extrapolation if scenarios passenger volumes are expected to go down by 5% in
there are reasons for the perception that the development in the 2009 and we further reduce the growth rates after 2020 to take
future might be different than in the past. In the case of Vienna account for saturation of air transport markets. In addition every
Table 1
Summary of regression results, method: SUR.
***, ** and * indicates that the coefficient is significant at a 1%, 5% and 10% level, respectively.
328 R. Sellner, P. Nagl / Journal of Air Transport Management 16 (2010) 325e329
2.5
1.5
0.5
0
2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040
Fig. 2. Difference of Austrian GDP and investments between restricted and unrestricted scenario in percent of restricted values.
scenario has a restricted case which reflects the maximum capacity scenario of an increased capacity as a result of the operation of
of the airport with the current layout of runways and an unre- a third runway starting operation in 2014 for the Vienna Inter-
stricted case where a third runway is available. The assumptions of national Airport. We construct a more optimistic scenario (based
growth rates for all cases are shown in Fig. 1. on official forecasts) given annual forecasts of growth rates of 5.4%
If the growth rates are transformed into passenger numbers we and a more conservative forecast assuming annual passenger
observe that the mid-term upper boundary for growth with a two- growth rates for the Austrian International Airport of 3% per
runway layout is at 26 m passenger. In the official forecast scenario annum. By 2040 in the official forecast scenario Austrian GDP is
the boundary would be reached in 2015, whereas in the realistic projected to increase by 0.81% based on a restricted scenario of no
scenario it would not be reached before 2020. In the restricted cases third runway. These effects include the direct effects of air acces-
it is assumed that in the long-term the two-runway layout can sibility as well as the indirect effects from increased investments.
accommodate for up to about 32 m passengers, which will enable Austrian investments are forecast to be 2.18% higher in 2040 based
further but slow growth. For the case of a third runway, in the on their restricted value of that year. Given annual growth rates of
official forecast scenario passenger numbers rise to about 50 m 3% per annum (conservative forecasts), the third runway influ-
passengers in 2040, whereas in the conservative scenario ences outcomes after 2020, increasing GDP and investments in
passenger numbers will not grow above 40 m in the long term. 2040 by 0.2 and 0.52%.
Using these forecasts we extend the series for air accessibility
from 2014 to 2040. All other regressors are assumed to be constant, Acknowledgements
so the resulting forecasts are ceteris paribus. Within the system of
equations the forecasts of GDP and investment for Austria are The authors of this paper would like to thank Helmut Hofer,
simulated using the coefficients of estimation in Table 1, consid- Wolfgang Schwarzbauer and Wolfgang Polasek for useful
ering the heterogeneity of GDP and investments, but taking air comments and assistance and the Vienna International Airport for
accessibility as given by the forecasts. Fig. 2 plots the resulting funding the project that led to this paper.
economic effects of the capacity expansion for Austrian GDP and
investment, i.e. the differences of those time series between the
two scenarios, in percentage of their restricted values. References
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