U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy stated he doesn’t believe a government bailout is necessary for struggling low-cost airlines following the collapse of Spirit Airlines. He prefers airlines seek funding from private markets, viewing the government as a lender of last resort. The debate comes as a surge in jet fuel prices, linked to geopolitical tensions, threatens the viability of budget carriers.
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U.S. Transportation Secretary Opposes Government Aid for Low-Cost Carriers
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy stated on Saturday that he doesn't believe a government bailout is necessary for low-cost airlines seeking $2.5 billion in relief due to rising jet fuel prices, particularly following the collapse of Spirit Airlines. Duffy emphasized that these airlines have access to cash and the government should be a lender of last resort, preferring private market funding.
Duffy also expressed concern that a bailout could be exploited by airlines seeking funds based on opportunity rather than genuine need. A group of budget airlines, including Frontier and Avelo, recently proposed exchanging warrants for equity stakes in return for $2.5 billion in government assistance. The Association of Value Airlines formally requested President Donald Trump's administration to establish a $2.5 billion liquidity pool to offset increased fuel costs.
Jet Fuel Surge Fuels Crisis
The surge in jet fuel prices, roughly doubling costs due to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, is squeezing airline margins and threatening weaker carriers. Executives from several low-cost carriers met with Duffy and Federal Aviation Administration chief Bryan Bedford to discuss the proposal, calculating the $2.5 billion figure based on projected fuel cost increases. Airlines for America, representing major U.S. airlines, opposes a bailout, arguing it would reward airlines that haven't taken self-help measures and create an uneven playing field.
The Association of Value Airlines countered that government policies have historically favored major carriers and that the fuel price surge is an uncontrollable external shock disproportionately impacting budget airlines.