Airbus versus Boeing Revisited: International Competition in the Aircraft Market

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP3876

Authors: Douglas Irwin; Nina Pavcnik

Abstract: This Paper examines international competition in the commercial aircraft industry. We estimate a discrete choice, differentiated products demand system for wide-body aircraft and examine the Airbus-Boeing rivalry under various assumptions on firm conduct. We then use this structure to evaluate two trade disputes between the United States and European Union. Our results suggest that aircraft prices increased by about 3.7% after the 1992 US ? EU agreement on trade in civil aircraft that limits subsidies. This price hike is consistent with a 5% increase in firms? marginal costs after the subsidy cuts. We also simulate the impact of the future entry of the Airbus A-380 super-jumbo aircraft on the demand for other wide-bodied aircraft, notably the Boeing 747. We find that the A-380 could reduce the market share of the 747 by up to 14.8 percentage points in the long range wide-body market segment (depending upon the discounts offered on the A-380), but would reduce the market for Airbus?s existing wide-bodies by an even greater margin.

Keywords: aircraft industry; trade policy

JEL Codes: F12; F13; L13


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
1992 US-EU trade agreement (F13)aircraft prices (L93)
subsidy cuts (H23)aircraft prices (L93)
Airbus A380 introduction (L93)Boeing 747 market share (L93)
Airbus A380 introduction (L93)demand for Airbus A330 and A340 (L93)

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