01441nam a22001097a 4500008004100000100004100041245009000082260004900172300003600221520102600257773004801283210211b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aLuttmann, Alexander and Nehiba, Cody aThe effects of employee hours‐of‐service regulations on the U.S. airline industry a Journal of Policy Analysis and Management  a39(4), Fall, 2020: p. 1043-1075 aMaximum employee work‐hour restrictions are implemented to reduce accidents. However, because they decrease the stock of work hours available to employers in the short run, they may also have detrimental effects. A quasi‐experiment suggests that pilot hours‐of‐service reforms, which decreased the number of flights and hours a pilot may work, reduced consumer choice and increased fares in the airline industry. We find that regional and low‐cost carriers reduced scheduled flight frequency, while less constrained legacy carriers (and potentially their wholly owned subsidiaries) were unaffected. Further, we find evidence that market concentration increased on many routes, implying that fare increases may be due to a decrease in competition. These findings suggest a situation where a policy implemented to correct one market failure, airlines not internalizing the full social costs of accidents by allowing dangerously fatigued pilots to fly, exacerbated another market failure by decreasing competition. a Journal of Policy Analysis and Management