Turtle21
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2007
- Posts
- 1,683
Insurance underwriters base their premiums by level of risk, they take into consideration training program, maintenance program, accident records. The background of the operators (pilots) is not even in their radar, Or you honestly believe Qantas that has never had a hull loss pays more in insurance than FedEx because they don't require a degree for their pilots? If that was the case then all of the worlds airlines would indeed require a degree for their pilots for the purpose of reducing overall cost, when in fact the opposite is true.
Ok. So, the reason US airlines use a degree as a discriminator isn't insurance costs... Frankly I don't care why they use a degree as a discriminator nor do I care that they do. I don't even mind if they do it just because they think it makes them bigger as sholes. I had a degree when I got hired and I have a graduate degree now. As long as they don't require a PhD I won't worry about it.