Versuchen GOLD - Frei

Why IndiGo still matters

Financial Express Bengaluru

|

January 07, 2026

DISMANTLING A MODEL THAT KEPT IT AFLOAT WILL NOT IMPROVE SAFETY OR AFFORDABILITY

- AMIT KAPOOR RICHARD DASHER

INDIA IS NOW becoming an unusually crowded graveyard of airlines. Carriers have repeatedly expanded and collapsed in a market that ought, by size alone, to be among the most lucrative. The usual explanation points to poor management or excessive ambition. The truer diagnosis is, however, structural.India is one of the world's highest-cost aviation environments. Yet it is pressured to maintain low fares. This combination has acted as a prolonged stress test. Every major airline operating in India has faced the same cost-price contradiction, and most have failed to resolve it.

IndiGo operates squarely within this contradiction. It is often described as a low-cost carrier, but India does not permit such a thing. Aviation turbine fuel is benchmarked to global prices and then burdened with ~24% in central and state taxes. Nearly 70% of an Indian airline's cost base including fuel, aircraft leases, maintenance, and spares is effectively dollar-linked, leaving carriers exposed to currency depreciation. Airport, landing, and navigation charges have climbed steadily, even as fares are nudged downwards by public pressure and schemes such as UDAN cap tariffs on low-density routes, often without fully compensating airlines for the losses incurred. IndiGo is therefore better understood as a low-price airline operating in a high-cost system.

That distinction matters, particularly after the operational chaos IndiGo experienced in December. A more careful reading suggests that while the airline deserves criticism for how it handled the crisis, the episode does not demonstrate that the underlying economics of the model have broken. Undermining the operating logic that has allowed it to survive would therefore be a mistake.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Financial Express Bengaluru

Financial Express Bengaluru

TCS, HCLTech cut headcount in Q3

Both companies step up AI-focused hiring and skilling

time to read

2 mins

January 13, 2026

Financial Express Bengaluru

Food inflation negative for 7th straight month

· Deflation may reverse for'food and beverages' from January

time to read

2 mins

January 13, 2026

Financial Express Bengaluru

Yields post biggest fall in nearly three weeks

· State supply cut, index entry buzz drive bond rally

time to read

1 mins

January 13, 2026

Financial Express Bengaluru

Inequality top concern for youth: Survey

*“Cyberfraud big worry for CEOs’

time to read

1 min

January 13, 2026

Financial Express Bengaluru

BSE, IFCI stocks surge on NSE IPO expectations

STOCK PRICES OF the BSE and IFCI surged on Monday on hopes of the listing of the National Stock Exchange (NSE), which is the highest-valued company in the India unlisted space.

time to read

1 mins

January 13, 2026

Financial Express Bengaluru

Bulls bet on revival of US-India trade talks

Equity indices sharply rebound to close in the green

time to read

1 mins

January 13, 2026

Financial Express Bengaluru

Trump weighing very strong options in Iran

IRAN SAID ON Monday it is keeping communications open with the US as President Donald Trump weighed responses to a deadly crackdown on nationwide protests, which pose one of the stiffest challenges to clerical rule since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

time to read

1 min

January 13, 2026

Financial Express Bengaluru

Germany pledges €1.24-bn boost for green partnership

INDIA AND GERMANY on Monday signed and exchanged 27 memoranda of understanding (MoUs) and joint declarations of intent, and made eight key announcements here.

time to read

1 min

January 13, 2026

Financial Express Bengaluru

Anup Saha joins Kotak Bank as whole time director

KOTAK MAHINDRA BANK on Monday announced that Bajaj Finance's former MD Anup Kumar Saha will oversee its consumer banking vertical.

time to read

1 min

January 13, 2026

Financial Express Bengaluru

Balance sheets don't fully reflect bank risks: Deputy guv

BANKING SUPERVISION CAN no longer rely only on balance sheets and compliance checklists as digitisation reshapes risks, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor Swaminathan J has said, calling for a sharper focus on operational resilience, third-party dependencies and customer protection.

time to read

1 min

January 13, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size