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Pilot shortage?????

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At best, I think there will be less of a glut of pilots. IT may feel like a shortage to some, and there may be some occasional anecdotal evidence of difficulty finding qualified pilots, but I don't see an actual "shortage", in the strict sense of the word.

How/when/if the new 1500 hour rule is enforced will play a significant role, IMO.
 
Yes with a two year time frame to implement, just like 135 scheduled commuter converting to 121 back in 1996
The Flight/Duty/Rest rules are required by Congressional law to be implemented/in use/in effect prior to 1 Aug. Congressional law gave the airlines a 3 year time frame before the start of the ATP requirement for -121.

I'm almost sure there will be some loophole that corporate america, in this case the airline industry, will create to allow these flight schools that promise the world but deliver a pile of sh*t, to circumvent the 1500 ATP requirement
The FAA rules COULD require less than 1500 hours, but Federal Law requires that all -121 pilots have an ATP by 1 Aug, 2013.

How/when/if the new 1500 hour rule
There is no 1500 hour rule. There is an ATP requirement for all -121 pilots that is LAW, but the actual FAA rules have not been established. Theoretically, the FAA rules may require less than 1500 hours as a requirement to get your ATP. Congress has recommended 1500 hours be one of the minimums for getting an ATP as of 1 Aug 2013.
 
And another point I think one should consider, especially a young person, about any future pilot shortage. Let's say that there is a shortage in the next few years.....but let's take a longer view. Do you think that someday, maybe within a decade or two for example, countries like India or China will be able to produce their own supply of pilots? Of course they will be able to. And when that happens, then what? Will we see cheap 3rd world pilots flooding the market willing to work for wages far less than an American pilot? Gee, where have we seen something like this happen before?

So, as a young person deciding to become a pilot, do you sink tens of thousands of dollars, perhaps as high as six figures, into a career where in your 30's or 40's you might be replaced with cheap third world labor, much like what happened to the American factory worker? There is a very real possibility that could happen, and it would suck to be a 40 year old pilot with a family to support and a mortgage to pay to have to retrain for another career.

The heyday of being an American airline pilot, just like the heyday of being a factory worker, may very well be in the rearview mirror, even if in the up and coming years we hit a cycle or two of "pilot hiring booms." If I were a young person, I think I would give this career a pass or at the very least have the money and education for an immediate switch to Plan B when some Indian dude is willing to fly a 777 for a bushel of radishes per flight and $20,000 per year.
 
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I agree somewhat with UAlDriver, but I think there would be a monumental task in getting security clearances for these people to work such a position in the US.

Where would you even begin to do background checks on people from third world countries?
 
Will we see cheap 3rd world pilots flooding the market willing to work for wages far less than an American pilot?

That is the general conundrum faced in the US. How do you allow US workers to compete fairly in a global market that does not enforce worker rights?

My factory workers have a union and won't work for $1 a day. Piss off... I'll make my shirts in China where a communist regime will squash a union like an ant hill and then sell my shirts here in the US.

So what do we do? Do we refuse to trade with countries like China? Use tariffs to create a level playing field? Wait and see?

I've never heard one politician produce a solution to this problem. We are in uncharted territory. The US middle class is dying off.
Countries like China can't drive consumption on their own. They have no middle class to speak of.

It's a problem....
 
I agree somewhat with UAlDriver, but I think there would be a monumental task in getting security clearances for these people to work such a position in the US.

Where would you even begin to do background checks on people from third world countries?

I am not trying to devolve this thread into a class on economics or whether or not the US middle class is disappearing....

I think when airlines have the ability to literally save 100's of millions on annual pilot costs by substituting an Indian pilot or a Chinese pilot with a US pilot, they will find a way. My airline, for example, pays its pilots over a billion a year in pay and benefits, never mind all those pesky US labor laws that cost them even more. With the money they would save, they could certainly throw a lot of money at that "problem" of background checks.

Is a young person in 2011 telling his parents that he/she wants to be an airline pilot the same as a young person in the 1960's saying that he wants to be a factory worker? Do you sink a high five figure/low six figure sum to take that bet? Is a near term "pilot shortage" the shiny object that distracts us and the career changer and the young person wannabe pilots from the true danger that lurks just over the horizon, just out of sight?
 
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I am not trying to devolve this thread into a class on economics or whether or not the US middle class is disappearing....

I think when airlines have the ability to literally save 100's of millions on annual pilot costs by substituting an Indian pilot or a Chinese pilot with a US pilot, they will find a way. My airline, for example, pays its pilots over a billion a year in pay and benefits, never mind all those pesky US labor laws that cost them even more. With the money they would save, they could certainly throw a lot of money at that "problem" of background checks.

Is a young person in 2011 telling his parents that he/she wants to be an airline pilot the same as a young person in the 1960's saying that he wants to be a factory worker? Do you sink a high five figure/low six figure sum to take that bet?


Cheap labor from China and India? Have you seen the ex-pat contract pay and benefits packages for those two countries? Our industry is about the only one, where (in a strict financial sense) you have to go to a third world in order to get paid a professional wage.

S
 
Cheap labor from China and India? Have you seen the ex-pat contract pay and benefits packages for those two countries? Our industry is about the only one, where (in a strict financial sense) you have to go to a third world in order to get paid a professional wage.

S

I think if you reread my post 63, my opinion is based upon the fact that countries like India and China are someday going to be able to produce their own pilots. If you think that up and coming countries like India and China are going to let themselves be dependent upon other nations for their supply of professionals, whether it be airline pilots, engineers, doctors, or whatever, I think you will be in for a surprise in the future.
 
I think if you reread my post 63, my opinion is based upon the fact that countries like India and China are someday going to be able to produce their own pilots. If you think that up and coming countries like India and China are going to let themselves be dependent upon other nations for their supply of professionals, whether it be airline pilots, engineers, doctors, or whatever, I think you will be in for a surprise in the future.

It's possible, but I seriously doubt anyplace in the world will EVER be able to train pilots as cheaply as the US does. We have in infrastructure that has taken decades (and several world wars) to develop, as well as a taxpayer funded system with little no no user fees.

It is EXTREMELY cost prohibitive for anyone outside the military to fund their own flight training unless it's in the US. So I really don't see how your Indian pilot example makes any sense. Do you actually think other countries will offer more affordable flight training than the US in the future?
 
It's possible, but I seriously doubt anyplace in the world will EVER be able to train pilots as cheaply as the US does. We have in infrastructure that has taken decades (and several world wars) to develop, as well as a taxpayer funded system with little no no user fees.

It is EXTREMELY cost prohibitive for anyone outside the military to fund their own flight training unless it's in the US. So I really don't see how your Indian pilot example makes any sense. Do you actually think other countries will offer more affordable flight training than the US in the future?

I don't know. Countries like China have an endless supply of cheap labor and their government likes to build stuff.....like big capital projects that keep people employed and the country stable. Who's to say they don't start building airports as their airspace is slowly opened for non-military use?
 

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