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Jerkiness may be in the eyes of the people sitting around you, but there's usually no shortage in the skies. Click through the gallery of 20 top irritating air plane behaviors.
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You folded your suit coat nicely and placed your hat in the allotted overhead space. Too bad Bin Hog just mangled it all while shoving his suitcase, stroller and shopping bags into a space meant for one personal item.
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Airplane movies: opiate of the flying masses. Except when your hyperactive neighbor takes 30 minutes to decide between "Grown Ups 2" or something a little less cerebral.
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The fidgety leg-shaker isn't all that common, but still annoying when encountered at altitude.
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Most airlines have a system for getting hundreds of passengers aboard in the least amount of time. That's why we schlep on as part of Group A or B or C. Just because you drew the short straw on this one doesn't give you the right to pretend to be dyslexic.
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Are we really blaming babies for doing what babies do naturally? Sure, as long as they're your kids, and not ours.
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"I'd learn some bladder control if I was in the window seat," runs the unspoken complaint.
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"Hey, we just landed. ... can you hear me? ... we just landed ... I'm on the runway ... can you hear me now? ... We just landed ... "
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We get it -- airlines have cut back on food service, forcing us all to bring our own snacks and meals onboard. But did you really have to clean out the back of your refrigerator?
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"Hey, we're trying to read here!"
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No one wins when elbow wars begin.
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Praise God, the middle seat is empty! Til the guy next to you lays claim to the no man's land of the middle seat with a book, coat or inflatable neck support.
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Thanks for sharing your globules of diseased saliva. Not you, of course. Or this considerate (paranoid?) gent.
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Bleep, bloop, blorp. Funny how some of the most irritating things on the planet can be called "games." Even more irritating are people who play them, on a plane, with the sound turned on.
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"Sir, is that a ... carry-on?"
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Here we've regressed to the time before the invention of the queue.
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Toenails are also trimmed at 30,000 feet, but that would have been a really offensive picture.
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Appalling side note: people who actually go to the bathroom on the airplane in their bare feet.
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We've all encountered the toilet hogger. What are they doing in there, you wonder as you hover cross-legged by the door. Certainly not being considerate of others.
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Seat designers, listen up: No one likes the recline button! Time to reinvent the airplane seat.
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"He kicked my seat-back." The top airplane irritant sometimes invites a violent response.

Editor’s Note: Cameron Gordon is an Adjunct Associate Professor of Economics and the Centre for Research and Action in Public Health (CeRAPH) (prior to that an Associate Professor of Economics) at the University of Canberra and has an ongoing appointment as a Principal Investigator at the Social Policy Simulation Center at the City University of New York.

Story highlights

Industry research shows that people increasingly dislike airline travel

Consumers especially dislike unbundled pricing because it is complex and easy to game by the airline

Lower prices have created much more demand for air travel, leading to congestion and more delays

CNN  — 

Decades ago, airline travel was considered a glamorous and exciting mode of transport, reserved for the rich and elite. Yet while flying has become more democratic and affordable, industry research shows that people increasingly dislike it.

A 2015 survey by the International Air Transport Association (IATA) found people were prepared to queue no more than 10 minutes through security.

More than half wanted to wait no more than 1 to 3 minutes to drop off their luggage.

But the real dissatisfaction began once passengers were onboard, with in-flight service and seat size topping the list of complaints.

What is the source of this dissatisfaction?

The belief that air passengers simply don’t realize how good they have it is growing – and not just among industry advocates, where one would expect it, but also from industry share analysts and some economists.

Since the worldwide deregulation of airlines began four decades ago, the inflation-adjusted cost of air travel has fallen dramatically. Now many more people can afford travel to their favorite destination, whenever they want.

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It’s all about perception

Why, then, are consumers such sourpusses?

Lower prices have created much more demand for air travel, leading to congestion and more delays – a byproduct of the industry’s success. Then there are those hated security procedures, another source of delays.

Again, that is outside airline control. The main driver of consumer complaint is misperception.

Taking a leaf from behavioral economics, air travel for most people is infrequent enough that most people don’t realize the true extent of the fall in cost.

Computer prices, for example, have fallen dramatically over the past 40 years and people buy computers enough to notice and appreciate that.

Similar price falls have occurred in air travel, but are less noticed because such travel is generally not as frequent as computer upgrades. Loss of “perks” like meals is much more noticeable and memorable, something behavioral economists refer to as “salience.”

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Decline in service quality

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Today's passengers get increasingly less legroom, narrower seats and less room to recline.

So should we pity the poor airline, hemmed in by fierce competition on the one side and ungrateful consumers on the other?

Not so fast. For one thing, the price of air travel should be adjusted for quality of service.

Consider computers again. Not only have their prices fallen but they deliver much more than their 1980s predecessors. But passengers not only have lost free meals or toiletry kits. They also now get increasingly less legroom, narrower seats, less reclining seat pitch and less service generally at the gate and on the plane.

Airline vendors continually pitch prototype products, such as seats where one does not fully sit down, and airlines continually test policies, like charging for toilet use on-board – that most human beings would find unpleasant at best.

If people were indeed just like cargo, unit price for distance covered would be a complete metric. But of course they’re not cargo.

Airlines are increasingly using “unbundled” pricing.

Passengers used to pay one price for everything: travel, meals, baggage allowances, in-flight entertainment etc. Now almost all carriers charge separately for everything.

Airline capacity is tightening and companies have more pricing power. Airlines are also using “big data” collected through booking systems for dynamic pricing (or yield/revenue) allowing them to get maximum revenue from each individual passenger by charging the highest price that passenger is willing to pay, or to induce travelers to fill seats that would otherwise go empty.

Airline analysts claim all this is good for the consumer. Big data by definition equals more information, which equals more transparency.

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We might have to fly but we don’t have to like it

Unbundled pricing eliminates “cross-subsidy” of one consumer by another: why should someone with only a carry-on bag, pay the same fare as someone with a full set of checked luggage?

Once more this is a one-sided view.

Consumers especially dislike unbundled pricing because it is complex, easy to game by the service provider, and often leading to unpredictable pricing at the gate.

Most people have been charged an excess baggage fee at the gate, something they were likely not planning on and almost impossible to challenge before embarking.

Consumers like to know what they will be paying but unbundled pricing often turns into “probabilistic” pricing where people pay a certain price only if they don’t cross certain lines.

As for “big data” airlines have much more access to its power than consumers do.

We cannot blame profit-making companies for wanting to squeeze as much out of the consumer as they can subject to competitive pressures.

Passengers are still flying and travel demand is growing, showing that despite service quality declines, they’re still willing to fly and at unit distance prices that are still historically low.

But it hardly seems fair that the consumer should like it.

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This article was originally published in December 2015.