You are comparing CAPTAIN pay to SO Pay. I see your point on upgrade time but that can slow and speed up anywhere, even here.
I compared Captain pay to S/O pay only because
that's where a person hired in the last 5 years at any of those companies is likely to be today.
As you pointed out, upgrades can "slow and speed up anywhere." For that reason alone, it's impossible to make a dollar-for-dollar comparison between any 2 airlines. But if you compare them over time, certain generalities become apparent. One is that while our published hourly rates are pretty close to industry standard, our
career earnings are no better than that of most other ACMI carriers.
Based on your upgrade times Your pay numbers are probably correct. I don't know how exactly you got them, but I assume you used FO pay for the first 2 years and then Capt. pay after that.
I used straight S/O pay for Astar, since that is the seat in which a new hire is likely to spend his first 8 years at the company. For the other carriers, I used the
least favorable conditions that would still account for them making Captain in the time reported (starting at F/O or S/O,
whichever paid less, for example). At Jet Blue, I assumed that a person spent his first 2 years in the Embraer, was seat-locked for another 2, then went to Airbus Captain. I did
not add the "guaranteed 5% profit sharing" at JB simply because I forgot to.
Believe me, I wasn't trying to "massage" the numbers. I didn't need to...they speak for themselves.
I didn't post the 5-year snapshots for UPS or FedEx, but they're pretty close to the JetBlue numbers.
I do know that a 5 year SO at ASTAR makes 80.31 an hour while a 5 year FO at Evergreen makes 64.00.
But why would Evergreen even
have any 5-year F/O's, when it only takes 2 years to make Captain?
A more appropriate comparison would be typical 5-year
employees at both companies. At Astar, he/she would be a S/O making $80/hr. At Evergreen, they would be a 747 Captain making $90/hr, while at Kalitta, they'd be doing the same job, but for $110/hr.
At Evergreen or Kalitta they would also be typed in the 747, and logging heavy, International time. True, not everybody's cup of tea, but a real inducement for guys with higher career aspirations.
The monthly guarantee at EVG is 65 and at ASTAR its 64 per bid period or roughly 69 a month.
I used 1,000 hrs/yr, as that's pretty close to what I've averaged over my career. That's pretty much what it is everywhere else, from what I can gather.
Now the upgrade is quick so its not a realistic comparison, but the upgrade is quick for a reason.
Let's travel down the road 15 years
EVG captain makes 133.00 an hour at 65 hours giving him 8645 a month plus 345.00 401 match equaling just over 9000 a month.
AST captain makes 185.46 (727) or 203.66 (300,8) giving the latter 14,052 a month plus 15% 401k company match giving him just over 16,000 a month. No to mention the fact that in order to get that 16K he need not show up to fly 1 single trip.
OK then, we'll look at 15 years. but we're not going to look at a condition that exists at a specific point in time, because the financial value of our careers are not defined by a single point in time, but by cumulative career earnings. Again using the hourly rates and time-to-upgrade info posted on that "other" website, we'll look at total earnings for the first 15 years at various ACMI carriers. I'll warn you in advance, you're not going to like this...
Gemini - $1,510,000
Evergreen - $1,531,000
Astar - $1,563,000 (finally surpasses Evergreen late in the 14th year)
Tradewinds - $1,618,000
Kalitta - $1,674,000
Jet Blue - $1,853,000 (again, just for S&G's, and because they're a LCC)
So you see, that while our hourly rates are well above those of our ACMI brethren, the actual amount of income we take home is middle-of-the-road at best, and in some cases somewhat less than so-called "scumbag" operators.
There I am done. I think I will "wait it out" here for my shot at the 16k... I'm happy, I make good money...and I don't live in a corn field.
If
you're happy, that's all that matters...