Thomas Cook (TCG.L), the world’s oldest travel firm, collapsed on Monday, stranding hundreds of thousands of holidaymakers around the globe and sparking the largest peacetime repatriation effort in British history.
Johnson said Thomas Cook had made a request to the government for around 150 million pounds but that bailing it out would have set up “a moral hazard in the case of future such commercial difficulties that companies face”.
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“We need to look at ways in which tour operators one way or another can protect themselves from such bankruptcies in future and clearly the systems that we have in place to make sure (they) don’t, in the end, come to the taxpayer for help,” he told reporters on the plane to the UN General Assembly in New York.
“One is driven to reflect on whether the directors of these companies are properly incentivized to sort such matters out.”
Johnson said his thoughts were with customers.
“It is a very difficult situation and obviously are thoughts are very much with the customers of Thomas Cook, the holidaymakers who may now face difficulties getting home we will do our level best to get them home,” he said.
“One way or the other the state will have to step in quite rightly to help stranded holidaymakers,” the prime minister said.
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