Some of the nation’s largest airlines have...
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Some of the nation’s largest airlines have an unfair competitive advantage because they own the computer reservation systems that travel agents use to book passengers, a General Accounting Office study says. Congress’ investigative agency concluded that the Transportation Department should try to correct the “anti-competitive features” of the systems, whose owners collect fees from airlines and travel agents. American Airlines’ SABRE system garners 43% of U.S. reservation system revenue; United Airline’s Apollo system, 32%; PARS, owned by Trans World Airlines and Northwest Airlines, 10%; Texas Air Corp.’s System One, 10%, and Delta Airlines’ DATAS II, 5%.
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