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Agents question airline risk

02 Oct 2019
Comments | 0

AS THE deadline for the

removal of monthly

remittance looms,

agents are still questioning

whether the risk airlines

face justifies the change

in payment structure

– particularly as it has

major impact on agencies’

corporate and government

accounts.

This was revealed in a

panel discussion on the

controversial topic at the

Asata Travel Summit.

“Iata believes that

markets with a 30-day

remittance cycle pose

a higher risk to noncollection,” said Alexandru

Stancu, Iata’s head of

regional office for Africa

and Middle East. “Iata

endeavours to keep its

collection rate at its current

of 99,98%.”

He added that South Africa

is one of only six remaining

markets in the world

still working on a 30-day

remittance cycle. “The world

is working towards weekly,

and in some markets daily

remittance cycles.” He

stressed that the BSP is

not a mechanism to provide

credit to the market.

Airlines claim that this

is being implemented to

mitigate and manage risk,

however Asata believes

it is to receive payment

quicker, Otto De Vries, ceo

of Asata, said. He added

that risk is already managed

in the programme through

strict criteria set by Iata,

including bank guarantees

and default insurance

programmes.

Many agents are SMMEs

who do not have the cash

flow to support the reduced

remittance cycles and carry

the credit that their clients

will still expect to receive.

The industry can expect job

losses, Otto added.

“I can’t understand the

risk facing airlines under a

30-day remittance cycle,”

said Phale Naake, dept. of

labour deputy director: fleet

and travel management

service. “Surely, any risk

is already being managed

by Iata’s stringent risk

management criteria?”

Phale questioned Iata’s

“drastic decision” and

added that he didn’t

believe that Iata had

acquainted itself with

South Africa’s ‘unique’

market. “This disruption

to the government travel

sector would mean that

government would be unable

to pay on time,” he said.

The change is daunting

to those working in the

government sector, said

Sailesh Parbhu, md of XL

Nexus Travel. He expressed

concern that relationships

with car rental and hotel

partners would suffer as

a result of having to pay

airlines first.

“We’ve identified that

government travel is

one of the more highrisk sectors; we know

government departments

are bad payers,” said Otto.

“Government spends an

estimated R1,5bn a year on

tickets. SAA is the largest

carrier of government

employees and is most

exposed to risk of nonpayments.”

New chief commercial

officer of SAA, Phillip

Saunders, said that while

he has every intention of

engaging with the trade to

prepare it for the change,

agents must be cognisant

of the fact that South Africa

doesn’t exist in a vacuum

and the removal of monthly

remittance is a positive

thing for the management of

agency cashflow.

The other side

eTravel has been on weekly

remittance for a year

now, Tammy Hunt, md of

eTravel, told TNW after the

debate. “In our opinion,

the industry should try to

move away from extending

credit as we are not in the

finance industry. However,

we do understand it would

be difficult to change

overnight.”

“Serendipity Group is also

on a weekly remittance

schedule; this was a

conscious decision we

made because we knew

this change was coming,”

says Dinesh Naidoo, group

operations director of

Serendipity Worldwide Group

and Asata president.

He encourages agencies

to move to a weekly

remittance schedule,

advising agents to

renegotiate with clients,

making them pay by

credit card. 

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