This is an often misunderstood aspect of regional economics. On a per unit basis, the regional pilots are actually OVER paid in comparison with their Major airline equivilents. We all think that the regional crews are cheap to management because of the low salaries but the regional airplanes produce so many fewer available seat miles (ASMs) that the comparison turns out quite poorly for the regional pilot.
As an example, take a B757 with 190 seats. Say that Capatain makes $165/hr. In one hour his airplane produces 190 seats * 470 knots = 89,300 ASMs. That's $0.0018 per ASM.
A 50-seat CRJ Capatin might make $80/hr . That's 50 seats * 450 knots = 22,500 ASMs. That's $0.0036 per ASM--double the cost per ASM of the highly paid B757 Capatin.
It's even worse if we consider that the B757 Captain flies longer average legs so is spending more of his block hours at cruise speed which produces an even larger split between the two.
This is how the JetBlue E190 pay scale ended up so low. They took their A320 pay rates (which are okay) and applied the same pay per seat to the E190.
I figured this out back in the early 1990s when I flew for American Eagle and we were trying to convince AMR that we were worth more than $15k/yr for an F/O and $28k/yr for a Captain. Back then the split was closer to 4 to 1, AAL to us, as we flew turboprops and the Major's hadn't taken all of today's pay cuts. Once I understood the implications of these calculations I knew that I had to move on to flying larger airplanes as the future at the regionals, even with the rumored RJ's right over the horizon, was limited by the economics.
In Europe they pay the regional pilots a pretty descent wage but they also top out much lower at the major carriers. The good part is that you reach a good wage much earlier in your career. The bad news is that the top end is much lower.
As an example, take a B757 with 190 seats. Say that Capatain makes $165/hr. In one hour his airplane produces 190 seats * 470 knots = 89,300 ASMs. That's $0.0018 per ASM.
A 50-seat CRJ Capatin might make $80/hr . That's 50 seats * 450 knots = 22,500 ASMs. That's $0.0036 per ASM--double the cost per ASM of the highly paid B757 Capatin.
It's even worse if we consider that the B757 Captain flies longer average legs so is spending more of his block hours at cruise speed which produces an even larger split between the two.
This is how the JetBlue E190 pay scale ended up so low. They took their A320 pay rates (which are okay) and applied the same pay per seat to the E190.
I figured this out back in the early 1990s when I flew for American Eagle and we were trying to convince AMR that we were worth more than $15k/yr for an F/O and $28k/yr for a Captain. Back then the split was closer to 4 to 1, AAL to us, as we flew turboprops and the Major's hadn't taken all of today's pay cuts. Once I understood the implications of these calculations I knew that I had to move on to flying larger airplanes as the future at the regionals, even with the rumored RJ's right over the horizon, was limited by the economics.
In Europe they pay the regional pilots a pretty descent wage but they also top out much lower at the major carriers. The good part is that you reach a good wage much earlier in your career. The bad news is that the top end is much lower.