GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Aerolíneas Argentinas S.A.

Aerolíneas Argentinas S.A.

State-owned flag carrier airline and national air-connectivity provider

ArgentinaAirline, State-Owned Enterprise, National Connectivity, Passenger Transport, Cargo, Public Service Infrastructure, Labor Relations, and Aviation Governance
55
MIXED

of 100 · unstable trend · Visibly decent and improving

Standing

55/100

Raw Score

46/85

Confidence

68%

Evidence

Broad

About

Aerolíneas Argentinas is Argentina’s state-owned flag carrier, founded in 1950 and renationalized in 2008. Its public value is strongest in domestic connectivity, cargo, and national transport continuity; its weaknesses are recurring public-subsidy dependence, labor disruption, and governance exposure to political cycles.

The institution has a clear public-service mission and extensive evidence of national connectivity, including nationwide domestic service and strong passenger volumes. Its audited 2023 statements and public reporting also show structural financial fragility, negative equity, and reliance on the State as majority shareholder. Recent operating-improvement claims should be read alongside labor conflict and privatization pressure.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview36%(9/25)
Contribution to Others37%(11/30)
Personal Discipline70%(7/10)
Reliability100%(10/5)
Stability Under Pressure60%(9/15)

Moderate-low institutional alignment: the airline has a real national-connectivity mission and documented service delivery, but chronic losses, state dependence, labor disruption, and politicized governance limit integrity and resilience confidence.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Declared moral framework3/5

Mission language emphasizes national connectivity, public service, safety, transparency, inclusion, and sustainability.

Accountability language3/5

Audited statements, budget approvals, and public reporting give observable accountability language, though not always paired with stable outcomes.

Mission decision alignment3/5

Network evidence supports the connectivity mission, but repeated fiscal and labor stress weakens consistency.

Contribution to Others

Worker safety and wellbeing2/5

The airline reports health and workplace programs, but labor conflict, wage disputes, and downsizing pressure materially reduce confidence.

Customer and user welfare4/5

High passenger volume, nationwide domestic service, and regional/international links support strong customer and public mobility value.

Community and environmental impact3/5

Public connectivity and cargo service benefit communities; environmental reporting shows some actions but limited outcome depth.

Supply chain and vulnerable groups2/5

Evidence is thinner on supplier equity, accessibility outcomes, and vulnerable-stakeholder grievance resolution.

Personal Discipline

Principled restraint2/5

Public-service obligations can discipline profit-seeking, but political cycles and fiscal dependence blur principled limits.

Charitable or public obligation2/5

The institution serves a public obligation rather than a charitable model; evidence supports obligation but not broad moral discipline beyond the transport mission.

Ethical discipline under incentive3/5

Publishing financial statements and safety procedures shows discipline; recurring losses and conflict lower the score.

Reliability

Transparency and reporting3/5

Financial statements, budget approvals, and audit materials are public, though some operational and grievance outcomes remain hard to assess.

Promise and product reliability2/5

Connectivity is substantial, but strikes, cancellations, and fiscal instability weaken reliability.

Governance and compliance3/5

Formal corporate and public-oversight structures exist; politicized ownership and audit warnings limit confidence.

Truthfulness in crisis2/5

Management and government communications address losses and reform, but competing claims from unions and political actors create contested public interpretation.

Stability Under Pressure

Crisis response3/5

The airline survived privatization failure, renationalization, pandemic-era disruption, and fiscal pressure while continuing operations.

Correction and reform3/5

Evidence of restructuring, route adjustments, published audits, and operating-improvement claims supports some correction.

Long term learning3/5

Institutional continuity is strong, but repeated ownership swings and labor crises show incomplete learning.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1950

Created as Argentina’s state flag carrier

Aerolíneas Argentinas was created by Decree 26.099, consolidating earlier mixed airline companies into a national flag carrier.

Established the institutional basis for Argentina’s state-led air connectivity model.

high
1990

Privatization begins a private-control era

The airline was privatized during Argentina’s market-liberalization period, later passing through private and Spanish-linked ownership structures.

Opened a long period of financial, ownership, and service-continuity stress.

high
2008

State control restored under Law 26.466

After severe financial and operating stress under Grupo Marsans, Argentina restored state control of Aerolíneas Argentinas and related operations.

Protected service continuity but created renewed public fiscal and governance responsibility.

high
2012

Joins SkyTeam as first South American member

Aerolíneas Argentinas joined SkyTeam, expanding alliance connectivity and aligning parts of the customer experience with global airline standards.

Strengthened international integration and service reach.

medium
2023

2023 reporting shows both broad service delivery and fragility

The 2023 statements reported more than 14 million passengers, 113,877 flights, presence in every Argentine province, 11,926 employees, and negative equity requiring State support.

Demonstrated real social utility alongside unresolved financial sustainability concerns.

high
2024

Independent audit highlights negative equity and reliance on State support

KPMG’s independent-auditor report emphasized negative equity and the need for periodic majority-shareholder support to continue normal operations.

Raised integrity and resilience concerns about the airline’s financial model.

high
2024

Labor strikes disrupt passengers amid privatization pressure

A strike in September 2024 caused widespread delays and cancellations, with reporting that about 37,000 passengers were affected as wage disputes and privatization pressure escalated.

Showed serious stress in worker relations, customer reliability, and political governance.

high
2025

Management reports 2024 operating surplus after years of deficits

Company-linked reporting and Argentine media said Aerolíneas Argentinas expected or reported a 2024 operating surplus after years of operating losses, driven by cost-cutting and restructuring.

Potentially meaningful improvement, but still requires cautious reading until audited and socially stabilized.

medium

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Privatization and private-control stress

1990

The airline was privatized and later passed through Iberia and Marsans-linked control amid deep financial stress.

Response: The later 2008 renationalization was justified as preserving continuity of air service, but it also reset the airline into a politically exposed state-enterprise model.

mixed

Post-renationalization fiscal stress

2023

Audited 2023 statements showed negative equity and reliance on periodic State support.

Response: Management published statements and pursued efficiency claims, but the structural issue remained central to public debate.

concern

Labor and privatization confrontation

2024

Strikes and government privatization pressure affected many passengers and put the flag carrier’s future under direct political stress.

Response: The company and government emphasized cost discipline and possible private-sector operation; unions framed the conflict as wage and public-ownership defense.

unstable

Progression

crisis years

Private-control and fiscal/labor crisis years exposed financial, ownership, and service-continuity fragility.

declining

current stage

Efficiency pressure and contested reform: recent management claims improvement, while labor conflict and privatization pressure make the trajectory unstable.

unclear

early years

State creation and national integration: created as a flag carrier to consolidate Argentina’s air routes and international links.

positive

growth years

Renationalization and rebuilding: state control restored continuity and rebuilt strategic connectivity while increasing fiscal accountability burden.

mixed

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Public-service connectivity is not merely rhetorical; official 2023 reporting shows broad domestic coverage and high passenger volume.
  • Transparency has improved through publication of financial statements, budget records, and audit materials.

Concerns

  • Financial fragility and negative equity create recurring pressure on public funds and governance credibility.
  • Labor conflict has directly harmed passengers and weakens the institution’s social-care performance despite the legitimacy of worker concerns.

Evidence Quality

7

Strong

5

Medium

1

Weak

Overall: broad

This profile evaluates observable institutional behavior, public records, and reported outcomes. It does not judge private intention, ideology, or hidden belief.