28 OCTOBER 2006, Page 30

Cheap flights hurt the poor

From John Stewart

Sir: In his paragraph in praise of cheap flights (The Spectator’s Notes, 14 October), Charles Moore alleges that the ‘greens’ genuine concern with the environment gets inextricably muddled up with their instinctive disdain for poor people’. What the facts show is that cheap flights are actually hurting poor people. Between 2000 and 2004 the number of international air trips of households with an annual income of less than £28,000 fell by 8 per cent. The British Social Attitudes Survey showed that in 2002 over half those in semi-routine or routine occupations had not flown at all, whereas nearly half of those in higher managerial and professional occupations had flown three or more times. Not surprisingly, then, the main users of budget flights turn out to be people from social classes A, B and C1.

This means that the tax subsidies enjoyed by the aviation industry — no tax on fuel, zero-rated for VAT — which make cheap flights viable operate as a tax subsidy for the rich. A policy aimed at assisting the poor would tax aviation properly and use the money on things that really matter to poor people: affordable bus fares; improved sound insulation in social housing; more policemen on the beat in crime-ridden areas.

But the biggest losers in our obsession with cheap flights will be the poorest in the poor world — the people least likely of any on earth to fly. They will be worst affected if climate change — to which aviation is the fastest-growing contributor — kicks in badly. That is why environmental campaign groups are teaming up with development organisations to call for an end to budget flights — both the environment and poor people will benefit if we succeed.

John Stewart

Chairman of AirportWatch, London SW9