And or both, Psychology and Business Admininstration Degrees as of May while flight training full time. And again those same classes would tell one that bankruptcy does not occur for random reasons. And also anyone would know that with that there are the restructuring that must occur. In addition it has to be approved by a judge. With that I know for a fact you cannot just show the cuts of a pilot because it is inaccurate and I know YOU know that as well. Its a great article no joke, however we must not look just at numbers alone! Statistics are all manipulated to prove whatever point you wish to prove anyways.
Must have finished degree(s) early. I thought you were gonna be done in December 2006, according to your own record. Congrats.
There are obvious costs associated with bankruptcy and re-organization features. But, the argument to be made is that if a specific group (the pilots) bears much of such costs while executives bathe in raises, bonuses, stock options, and other forms of "compensation", one could argue this is
boarder line unethical.
AMR paid out tens of millions to executives while pilots gave tens of millions while under their restructe plan, bankrupt or not, turned losses to the tune of nearly $1B.
No other group (except maybe mx) was asked for such concessions at the expense of executive reparation.
I posted the numbers as kind of a "oh shucks!" post. I think pilots are undervalued, personally. The compensation of excutives and senior mgmt is no secret though. Forbes, CNN, MSNBC, Fox, Time, The Economist, The McKinsey Quarterly, and so forth, have all done micro and macro analysis of the airlines and their compensation v. revenue of all government termed, "highly compensated persons" over the past 10 years. So its no secret that when the airline needs some dough, for any reason, they turn to the pilots, not as a last, but as a first resort.