This unfortunately seems to be the case. U.S. Pilots are the worst paid around the globe.
The United States has the lowest pay for pilots and the HIGHEST requirements in the world.
I know for a fact-from first hand conversations with pilots from these countries- that anywhere in Europe, Brazil, Egypt, India, and China the minimums are 500TT period. No multi required beyond having your MEL. Yet starting pay in each country is the equivalent to an upper middle class lifestyle...which here in the U.S. is roughly $80,000/year more or less depending on what part of the country you live in.
Meanwhile, those of us here in the United States are required to have well over 1,000TT and over 100 to 200 hours of multi time just to have the privilege of earning $16 to $18,000/year, sleeping in the walk in closet of some crash pad that looks like a frat house, and never being home.
I really don't want to get into the pros/cons of high time requirements as there is something to be said for both sides of the argument...however, there is no excuse for pilots in this country to earn these salaries and have such low quality of life...ESPECIALLY if we are required to have such high times before even being called in for an interveiw.
In other words, Regionals are not an entry level job in this country but that is how we are treated. By the time we reach that level we have already paid our dues(and then some) as instructors, part 135 flying boxes on the back side of the clock, patrolling pipelines, etc..... Lets not bring up the hiring boom of 2006-2008 where few new hires at regionals had to do any of those jobs...that was an anomaly.
The only hope is that more and more people such as myself choose to leave this industry and refuse the low pay, low QOL. I was recently hired by a company which is 5 minutes from my house, pays me 3x more than what I would have made as a second year captain at a regional, and I get to be home everyday. Best part is that with my salary I can continue to fly GA on weekends and acutally ENJOY it. I had forgotten what it was like to have fun in an airplane.
Luckily my parents talked me into getting a non-aviation degree. Back in the day I was dead set on going the Utah Valley State online Aviation degree route. My parents stepped in and gave me a massive lecture, convincing me to actually attend a University and get a non-aviation degree... which I am eternally grateful for now.
In any case.... if only less pilots would be willing to "starve for their art" then maybe, just maybe we wouldn't be getting these fast food drive through wages.