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The economics behind "Basic Economy" – A masterclass in price discrimination
Basic Economy fares are ultra-restricted airline tickets that offer a lower base price in exchange for fewer benefits than standard economy class. Introduced by major U.S. carriers in the 2010s, these fares have become a widespread strategy for market segmentation - a textbook example of price discrimination in practice.
Today, American's Basic Economy permits one carry-on bag, allows paid seat selection starting 48 hours before departure, and yields half elite qualifying credit, with no changes or upgrades and last-group boarding. Savvier flyers increasingly turn to post-purchase monitoring tools such as JetBack, which scans for price drops and automatically files for e-credits on their behalf, clawing back some of the spread created by Basic Economy upsells. This industry-wide practice might not violate antitrust laws (since price discrimination is generally legal and there's no evidence of a secret agreement - it's more a competitive contagion), but it does illustrate how an oligopolistic market can lead to outcomes that many consumers dislike yet have little choice to avoid (except by going to niche players like Southwest, which has tried to capitalize on this by advertising "Bags fly free" and no change fees, implicitly contrasting with Basic Economy policies).
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