Matty_85
Active Member
Sorry but you can't just ignore macroeconomic factors I'm afraid. Airline travel is almost entirely a discretionary purchase (barring the small % of business passengers) so demand for flights is inextricably linked to the wealth of the catchment.
From ONS data the West Midlands (region not county) is only 86% of the UK average per head disposable income (and Birmingham itself is almost certainly lower than this due to large areas of deprivation).
So WM is not even at the average level, and then you have to consider that London is almost 40% above that average.
I know you didn't bring up London but surely you can see that airlines will go where the money is?
This has nothing to do with average incomes of the West Midlands region & the statistics you are using don’t go anywhere close to explaining why BHX can’t sustain a daily NY flight when we have successfully in the past. Actually it’s absurd to even try and draw parallels! It’s been easier for these legacy airlines to force us down to Heathrow instead of offering a decent direct TATL service from BHX & in my opinion with new efficient narrow bodies this has to change.
The only data relevant here is how many from the West Midlands region are having to use Heathrow or Manchester because BHX doesn’t offer direct flights. I know that data is almost impossible to collect (unless it’s connecting out of BHX) but trying to make out that the West Midlands is in such dire poverty that we couldn’t in any way support a single daily NY flight is bonkers! I think you may need to reset your very narrow view of Birmingham.