"India is a very big country. It has a huge trade relationship with the US, particularly for IT, has huge agricultural trade between the two countries," chief executive of Delta Airlines Richard Anderson told reporters yesterday during a luncheon meeting at the National Press Club .
"But in essence we don't really have any aviation trade. We have exited the market completely," Anderson said.
"Because essentially what these carriers have done is with subsidised government strategies, come into the marketplace to basically shift the traffic off of us and take us out of the Indian market," he said.
Anderson said a recent white paper by the American airlines industry has proved beyond doubt the subsidies provided by several governments like that of India.
"I mean those countries all required these airlines to file their financial statements. Oddly enough, in the US we don't require that. But other countries do," he said.
"And we were able to build a really strong case," he said in response to a question.
"To put it in a legal framework, we proved subsidy beyond a reasonable doubt. And you can't refute the evidence. The evidence is overwhelming," Anderson said.
A long-haul wide--body 777 in the US, drives about almost 1,000 jobs per flight.
