Aviation for a better future.
AVIATION: MAJOR CONTRIBUTOR TO
GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPERITY
Aviation provides the only rapid worldwide transportation network,
which makes it essential for global business. It generates economic
growth, creates jobs, and facilitates international trade and tourism.
According to recent estimates by the cross-industry Air TransportAction Group (ATAG), the total economic impact (direct, indirect induced and tourism-connected) of the global aviation industry
reached US$2.7 trillion, some 3.5 percent of world’s gross domestic
product (GDP) in 2014.
The air transport industry also supported a total of 62.7 million jobs
globally. It provided 9.9 million direct jobs. Airlines, air navigation
service providers and airports directly employed over three million
people. The civil aerospace sector (the manufacture of aircraft,
systems and engines) employed 1.1 million people. A further 5.5
million worked in other on-airport positions. 52.8 million indirect,
induced and tourism-related jobs were supported by aviation.
These estimates do not include other economic benefits of aviation,
such as the jobs or economic activity that occur when companies
or industries exist because air travel makes them possible, the
intrinsic value that the speed and connectivity of air travel provides,
or domestic tourism and trade. Including these would increase the
employment and global economic impact numbers several-fold.
One of the industries that relies most heavily on aviation is tourism.
By facilitating tourism, air transport helps generate economic
growth and alleviate poverty. Currently, approximately 1.2 billion
tourists are crossing borders every year, over half of whom travelled
to their destinations by air. In 2014, aviation supported over 36
million jobs within the tourism sector, contributing roughly US$892
billion a year to global GDP.
Air transport is a driver of global trade and e-commerce, allowing
globalization of production. The small volumes of air cargo amount
to big values in world trade. In 2014, US$6.4 trillion worth of goods
were transported internationally by air, representing 35 percent
of world trade by value, despite representing only 0.5 percent by
volume. Aviation’s advantage over other modes of transport in
terms of speed and reliability has contributed to the market for
“same-day” and “next-day” delivery services and transportation of
urgent or time-sensitive goods.
Some 87 percent of business-to-consumer (B2C) e-commerce
parcels are currently carried by air. The e-commerce share of
scheduled international mail tonne kilometres (MTKs) grew from 16
percent to 83 percent between 2010 and 2016 and is estimated to
grow to 91 percent by 2025.
AVIATION PROVIDES SIGNIFICANT SOCIAL BENEFITS
The availability of reliable air transport services provides people
with access to what they need: decent livelihoods, food, healthcare,
education, safe communities and spaces, etc. Aviation is by far
the world’s safest and most efficient mode of long-range mass transport mode.
The Industry High-Level Group (IHLG), established
in 2013, is an initiative of the International CivilAviation Organization (ICAO) Secretary General,
bringing together the heads of four industry
organizations: the Airports Council International(ACI), the Civil Air Navigation Services Organisation (CANSO), the International Air Transport Association (IATA) and the International Coordinating Council of Aerospace Industries Associations (ICCAIA). The
IHLG is an informal group which considers matters
of global significance to international civil aviation
that can be better addressed in a collaborative rrangement between States and the industry rather
than working individually on such matters.
The IHLG organizations have collaborated to provide a
comprehensive view of the importance of aviation on
supporting the global economy and generating social
benefits through the prism of sustainable air transport
solutions.
The complete 68-page document, Aviation Benefits 2017, is available.
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