Cargo Facts

No products in the cart.

SUBSCRIBE
  • NEWS
  • AI TOOL
  • INSIGHTS DATA
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • FEATURES
  • LIVE EVENTS
  • VIRTUAL EVENTS
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
    • Webinar Library
  • PODCAST
  • CONSULTING
Thursday, July 16, 2026
Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Freighter Transactions
  • Capacity & Demand
  • Conversions
  • Carriers
  • Routes
  • AAM
  • The Future
  • Cybersecurity
Cargo Facts
  • NEWS
  • AI TOOL
  • INSIGHTS DATA
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • FEATURES
  • LIVE EVENTS
  • VIRTUAL EVENTS
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
    • Webinar Library
  • PODCAST
  • CONSULTING
Log In
No Result
View All Result
Cargo Facts
No Result
View All Result

75th Anniversary Snapshot: What’s more valuable? Passengers or cargo?

Randy WoodsbyRandy Woods
February 9, 2018
in Capacity & Demand, News, Technology
0
Share on FacebookShare on LinkedIn

At the start of the new year, one can be forgiven for being overly optimistic about the future. But there are limits.

One case in point comes from an article written in 1953 by Milton A. Caine, the former managing editor of Air Transportation magazine – the precursor to Air Cargo World. Titled “Cargo Will Top Passengers!” and published exactly 65 years ago this month, Caine’s piece all but guaranteed that the explosive growth of air cargo would be the bread and butter of the aviation business.

“We predict that within 10 years – by 1963 – air cargo revenues will climb higher than passenger revenues,” Caine wrote boldly in the February 1953 issue. As evidence, he cited the enormous growth rates that carriers were reporting at the time, such as a 325 percent annual increase in cargo volume at Pacific Northern Airlines. He also noted how Seaboard & Western airlines had predicted a 340 percent increase in commercial trans-Atlantic airfreight volume between 1951 and 1955.

To further bolster his case for unbridled optimism, Caine cited how another transportation system, the New York subway, which carried no cargo but moved more people at the time than any other railroad in the United States, was “continually in debt,” as was the Long Island Railroad. “Obviously, passenger travel is not too profitable,” he wrote.

In 20-20 hindsight, it’s easy to dismiss such confident predictions as folly. But how could Caine have known how the speed of jet travel and the advent of the widebody jumbo jet would set off an explosion in affordable passenger travel over the next decade? Today, the average carrier earns between 15 and 20 percent of its revenue through cargo – even less once low-cost carriers are factored in.

But in some ways, Caine had a point about the hidden value of cargo. For many passenger carriers, high-value shipments of pharmaceuticals or electronics carried as belly cargo are far more profitable that a typical economy-class passenger. For some long-haul international routes, the value of its premium passengers plus the belly cargo are usually enough to make the trip profitable – even if most of the economy seats remain empty.

It’s unlikely that Milton Caine’s prediction will ever come true. But to those carriers that understand the value of hauling cargo in the bellies of passenger planes, such as Emirates, Caine’s analysis looks more salubrious than silly.

Tags: ACNAir Cargo World's 75th anniversaryAir Transportation magazineaircraftViewpoints
Previous Post

Delta Cargo’s ‘Pharma 4’ program adds 8 new destinations

Next Post

Amazon becomes more like an integrator with new program

Related Posts

Aloha Air Cargo 737-400F
Fleets

World Star signs 1st 737-400F deal with Saltchuk Aviation

July 16, 2026
Challenge Group 777-300ERSF
Routes

Challenge Group prepares for 2nd 777-300ERSF delivery amid network expansion

July 16, 2026
Mammoth Freighters 777-200LRMF
Freighter Aircraft

First Chinese 777 conversion site emerges in Mammoth deal with STAECO

July 15, 2026
Next Post

Amazon becomes more like an integrator with new program

Please login to join discussion

Cargo Facts Free Newsletters

Cargo Facts Connect Podcast

  • About Us
  • Help Center
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy & Usage Terms
  • ADA Compliance
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • The Dahl Scholarship

 [wt_cli_manage_consent]

Follow Us

twitter linkedin podcast podcast podcast
© 2026 Royal Media
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Freighter Transactions
    • Capacity & Demand
    • Conversions
    • Carriers
    • Routes
    • AAM
    • The Future
  • Insights Data
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • AI Tool
  • Features
  • Live Events
  • Virtual Events
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
  • Podcast
  • Consulting
  • Subscribe
  • Log In / Account

© 2022 Royal Media & Cargo Facts

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Freighter Transactions
    • Capacity & Demand
    • Conversions
    • Carriers
    • Routes
    • AAM
    • The Future
  • Insights Data
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • AI Tool
  • Features
  • Live Events
  • Virtual Events
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
  • Podcast
  • Consulting
  • Subscribe
  • Log In / Account

© 2022 Royal Media & Cargo Facts