enigma
good ol boy
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 2,279
Edit: For those who have a hard time comprehending my musings, this is an ECONOMICS related question. Not a call to strike, etc. Got it?
I was just about to respond to a pro PFT post on the interview bbs, but decided to just make another string.
Here goes.
What if every commercial/ATP pilot earned more than $100K per year?(or, at least four times the national average income) No PFT, no working for free.
In effect, this would mean that all aviation businesses (charter, training, freight, pax, etc) would experience a dramatic increase in his cost of doing business. Those costs would be passed on to the ultimate consumer.
So, what would happen? Would people stop flying to FL for vacation? Would GM stop flying in parts to fix broken factory equipment? Would Dell stop flying in chips? Would "wannabe"pilots stop earning new ratings?
As I read managements defense of thing such as PFT, I get the feeling that managers think that they have a God given right to a supply of cheap pilots, and I wonder what would happen if there was no supply of cheap pilots. I doubt that we would see much change in anything. I think that people would still fly, boxes would still fly, students would still fly, cables would still be patrolled, traffic would still be watched, etc, etc, etc.
The only difference would be that pilots would make a better living. I realize that some markets would shrink until an equalibrium, but once the market stabilizes, I think that we would be back to normal.
"We have met the enemy and he is us" Pogo.
enigma
I was just about to respond to a pro PFT post on the interview bbs, but decided to just make another string.
Here goes.
What if every commercial/ATP pilot earned more than $100K per year?(or, at least four times the national average income) No PFT, no working for free.
In effect, this would mean that all aviation businesses (charter, training, freight, pax, etc) would experience a dramatic increase in his cost of doing business. Those costs would be passed on to the ultimate consumer.
So, what would happen? Would people stop flying to FL for vacation? Would GM stop flying in parts to fix broken factory equipment? Would Dell stop flying in chips? Would "wannabe"pilots stop earning new ratings?
As I read managements defense of thing such as PFT, I get the feeling that managers think that they have a God given right to a supply of cheap pilots, and I wonder what would happen if there was no supply of cheap pilots. I doubt that we would see much change in anything. I think that people would still fly, boxes would still fly, students would still fly, cables would still be patrolled, traffic would still be watched, etc, etc, etc.
The only difference would be that pilots would make a better living. I realize that some markets would shrink until an equalibrium, but once the market stabilizes, I think that we would be back to normal.
"We have met the enemy and he is us" Pogo.
enigma
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