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Both Indian, global air traffic decelerate

India's domestic air traffic grew by 4.2 per cent in June this year compared with last year, a little lower than the average global growth rate whereas global air traffic decelerated from 6.2 per cent in May to 4.7 per cent in June.

‘Growth in India so far this year (January-June) has been weak at two per cent. Although there is positive sentiment for the incoming government, inflation is high and consumer demand remains constrained,’ the International Air Transport Association (IATA) said while announcing the
latest global data.

The data showed a modest deceleration in demand growth compared to May, with total revenue passenger kilometers (RPKs) rising 4.7 per cent over the year-ago period. In May this year, 6.2 per cent was the year-on-year increase.

The traffic flown by Asia-Pacific carriers rose 4.9 per cent compared to the year-ago period but capacity rose 6.7 per cent as load factor slipped 1.3 percentage points to 77.9 per cent, the data showed.

The outlook for this region looked ‘broadly positive, with measures of manufacturing activity and
export orders pointing to better performance of China,’ the IATA said.

‘Demand for air travel and the connectivity it provides remains strong. But uncertainty in the global political and economic climate has the potential to negatively impact demand,’ IATA's Director General and CEO Tony Tyler said.

‘Risk is today’s reality, whether it's conflict in the Middle East, sanctions and an impending trade war with Russia, possible default in Argentina or the Ebola outbreak in Western Africa. All have the potential to dent demand,.’

He, however, said IATA was optimistic of the industry ending the year with an improvement in profitability over 2013.
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