Anatole Kaletsky
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At last, a bureaucratic body staffed by unknown and unelected members of the new Labour quangocracy, has done something absolutely right. The Competition Commission's proposal forcibly to split ownership of London's three main airports, all at present owned by BAA, was one of the bravest and most sensible decisions by an official body in living memory. That it will cause fury in the business Establishment, consternation in the City and confusion among ministers and their Tory shadows, shows just how wise and brave it was.
The proposal to break up BAA (formerly the British Airports Authority), which its chief executive predictably described as flawed and counter-productive, is excellent for two broad reasons. First, competition generally yields better results, in terms of both customer service and economic efficiency than monopoly, regulation and central planning. Secondly, this particular break-up will protect London from a big environmental blight and the British economy from a serious blunder, by negating one of Gordon Brown's oddest “long-term commitments” - his incomprehensible determination to expand Heathrow.
Mr Brown's policy on airport expansion, backed strongly by the CBI and most business lobbies, is based on one article of faith. Southeast England is supposed to be desperately short of runways and this shortage threatens the entire economy by damaging London's competitiveness as a financial and business centre. Yet what is the evidence for it? There are certainly queues at Heathrow airport, but is a shortage of runways the main cause?
Check-in, security and border delays at Stansted are often as bad or worse, yet the runway there operates at only 70 per cent capacity, against Heathrow's 95 per cent. Moreover, the problems at Heathrow, where 33 per cent of flights are delayed by more than 15 minutes, are only slightly worse than in Paris, where 28per cent of flights are similarly late. Yet Paris has four runways compared with Heathrow's two.
It may be true that extra runways at Heathrow would relieve London's air travel problems. But it is equally possible that competition would deliver big improvements - as it did in telecoms and electricity distribution - by squeezing greater efficiencies out of existing resources.
The commission offers many examples of changes that breaking up BAA's monopoly might bring.
Better services and lower charges at Stansted and Gatwick could create incentives for airlines to transfer flights from Heathrow. Runway use could be maximised by encouraging off-peak flying. Airline economics could be shifted against the environmentally damaging hub-and-spoke system that relies on transfer passengers changing planes at airports such as Heathrow, in favour of the direct “point-to-point” services operated by airlines such as Ryanair, Virgin and easyJet.
Of course, it is possible - indeed likely - that London would still need more airport capacity. But until competition has been given a chance, it is impossible to say how much extra capacity will be needed and where new runways should be built.
This observation leads to the second aspect of yesterday's Competition Commission report that will be much more politically controversial than advocacy of greater competition.
Competition is a motherhood and apple-pie nostrum that every politician and business leader endorses in theory. But breaking up BAA will delay for years, probably for ever, any possibility of further expanding Heathrow.
This will deeply disappoint the CBI and other business lobbies, and will infuriate the Prime Minister, who had been hoping to burnish his image as strong economic leader in troubled times by staunchly supporting Heathrow expansion and contrasting Labour's tough “pro-business” position with the Tories' much more sceptical and greenish view.
Unfortunately for Labour, yesterday's report means that Mr Brown has again chosen exactly the wrong issue on which to take his resolute stand - and has ended up snookering himself instead of David Cameron.
As well as giving credibility to competition as at least a partial alternative to physical expansion, the commission's report will trigger a shake-up in Britain's aviation industry that totally precludes any long-term decisions being taken on capacity expansion in the lifetime of this Parliament.
Even more embarrassingly for Mr Brown, the now inevitable debate over BAA will draw attention to the weakness of the arguments for expanding Heathrow presented by the company, British Airways, the CBI and other business lobbies.
For example, business lobbyists are having to argue publicly against the geographical truism that Heathrow's flight-paths directly over densely populated areas of central London might disqualify it as a global hub. In doing this, the managers of BAA and BA are resorting to scaremongering absurdities that will end up making fools of themselves and their political supporters.
BAA's chairman wrote in the Financial Times yesterday that a decline in transfer passengers at Heathrow would mean Paris, Amsterdam and even Dubai becoming Britain's hub airports. “Why would a business want to be based in London, a city at the end of a branch line?” he asked.
New York, Los Angeles and Tokyo, like London, are big business centres that can generate enough direct traffic not to rely on the transfer passengers needed at Atlanta, Frankfurt or Amsterdam.
Moreover, when it comes to a choice between flying directly from one big city to another, or changing at a “hub”, most passengers will prefer the direct route. This is why the hub-and-spoke model may not even make sense from a business standpoint, as Robert Ayling, BA's former chief executive, admitted in The Sunday Times a few months ago.
In view of all this confusion, how should British politicians react to the proposed airport break-up, especially at a time when both parties want to show that they are “business friendly” and decisive on important infrastructure projects such as airports and nuclear power?
For Mr Brown there is no answer, as he could never bring himself to admit that he made a mistake in backing an airport expansion programme that would be bad for Britain.
But for Mr Cameron, the report presents a great opportunity. When asked whether he is pro-business or anti-business, for or against big infrastructure projects, he should offer this answer: “I am for businesses and projects that are good for the country and against those that are bad.”
Is such a message really too complicated for Britain's voters?

Anatole Kaletsky writes for The Times Comment pages on Thursdays. One of the country's leading commentators on economics, he was formerly Economics Editor and is now an Associate Editor of The Times. He has won many awards for his financial and political journalism. Before joining The Times, he worked for 12 years on the Financial Times
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We need more runways like a hole in the head.
Oil prices will continue upwards as the oil companies turn to more difficult sources (polar and oil sands). Environmental pressures will increase and force action against air travel. Briton should therefore be investing in more sustainable travel.
John Byng, Crawley, UK
It always confounds as to why people prefer to use LHR. I for one use LCY if I can but generally I use LGW as the trians to the city have me arriving in the right part of the city for me at least. Rather than getting the tube for over an hour to Holborn or even worse the Heathrow Express.
Chris McD, Grand Cayman , Cayman Islands
Kris, you are conflating LONDON with BUSINESS. I fly on business a lot, and would not DREAM of using LHR when I can pop over from a local`airport to AMS or CDG etc for a swift connection & a far better fare . LHR is a nightmare, an expensive, crowded, & inaccessible mess except from the south west
George Edwards, Beijing, China
I think you have answered the question "Paris has four runways" its keeping up with the French.
Mitch, Wolverhampton, England
Some valid points here albeit made with a touch of hysteria !
Whoever runs Heathrow the underlying reasons for wanting a third runway will remain the same. The "never do anything anywhere" luddite refrain is depressingly familiar and leads to higher costs in every way once reality is acknowledged.
Dan Lewis, High Wycombe, UK
Oh no it won't.............!!!!!
ian payne, walsall,
Now watch out for the spin and string-pulling. "The intensity of the scaremongering attack on any new development is proportional to the level of benefit that it endows." (The Law of Beneficial Developments).
Frank Upton, Solihull,
I am for businesses and projects that are good for the country and against those that are bad.
Is such a message really too complicated for Britain's voters?
Er, no, it is just meaningless, fence-sitting whiffle.
Robert C, London, UK
A brilliant decision by the Competition Commission. Heathrow is too big already: further expansion wld be devestating for W. London. Long term we need a new airport in the Thames Estuary but this will start encouraging a 'spreading of the load' - hopefully not just in the SE but to regional airports
Donna Walker, Effingham, England
The CBI are in favour of a 4th runway because it is just one more way to hoover up taxpayers money in to their members coffers.
I passed through 'security' at Terminal 1 yesterday, en route to Edinburgh, I showed machine generated boarding pass and was photographed but no one checked my identity.
TrevorH, OXON, UK
Bearing in mind the ability to pass on prices, saying that "competition would deliver big improvements - as it did in telecoms and electricity distribution", is an interesting point.
We can look forward to ever increasing prices.
Jeremy Taylor, Crawley, UK
It appalls me to see the expansionists once again shouting loud, when England is already too full, too noisy, and suborned to the view of political and business leaders who have neither our health, welfare nor our quality of life at heart. Which part of "enough is enough" don't you understand?!
Paul Bradbury, London, England
Most international business travellers want to arrive at LHR, not miles from the capital at Gatwick or Stansted even with a super fast train which would no doubt sit outside any London rail terminal for ages waiting for a platform to become free.
Kris, SE3,
I agree with a lot of this. But competition will include trying to increase night-time flights, to the horror of people in the surrounding areas. Resisting this pressure will rely on regulators of some sort - and all UK regulators seem to be bureacratic but totally ineffective.
Name withheld, Manchester,
I think they should not be allowed to use the name British, same as the Airlines. They are private companies and about as British as Gorgoyle Brown is a good prime minister/ chancellor
We need the Airport in the Thames estuary on reclaimed marshland and not to worry about nature there.
Peter, chelmsford, essex
Britain should think ahead and build four runways in a new airport in the estuary - Isle of Grain? - linked into the high-speed Eurostar track.
martin, westminster, uk
Brilliant, in line with nulabours treachery. Harm London and transfer activity to our "European friends". What is surprising is that G. Brown has not jumped on this bandwagon. We need all the economic activity we can get , even if it is just to make up for the sell out of the rest of our interests
D.L. Stephens, York, England
Felays at Heathrow, are mainly due to saturation of runway availability. Delays due to inefficient passenger handling is a different matter. Two, (take off) runways would halve the operational delays.
Chris Wood, Camberley, UK
Simple solution, merge Luton and Stanstead into North London airport, a seperate owner for Gatwick and BAA can keep Heathrow. Each should have a super fast train link to a major London train station.
Heeners, Bath,
This is what tthe board for, just because it has not got to BSkyB yet its the only thing it will do as it's foreign owned. It would not have done it to the old BAA. GB support is his usual support for business against the local but in this case the local are wrong. We do need an expanded airport.
James , Brighton, England