How Dollar, High Fuel Tax Weigh On Airlines' Profitability In India — Air Asia Ex-CFO Explains

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Airline Profitability: Air Asia Ex-CFO Names Dollar-Based Expenses, High Fuel Taxes (Photo: Unsplash)
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Summary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed
  • Vijay Gopalan highlights structural issues hurting Indian aviation profitability
  • Fuel costs form 50% of airline expenses, impacted by high state taxes
  • About 75% of airline costs are dollar-denominated, raising FX risk concerns
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Air Asia's former Chief Financial Officer Vijay Gopalan has said the Indian aviation industry had "structural issues" that are impacting their profitability.

"Now is probably a great time to streamline and ensure that it is cost-competitive. And, therefore, investors are not afraid to enter this industry," Gopalan, who is the CFO of rare earth mineral company Entellus, said in a video shared on X. "It's high time that we make structural changes and not make quick fixes."

He added that half of the expenses borne by airlines were due to fuel costs. These, in turn, were influenced by state taxes that had varying costs that affected overall costs that firms had to bear. The former airline executive argued for fuel tax rationalisation.

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