Seggy
Well-Known Member
The flip side is to look at how many more jobs were created. I offer that transportation sector jobs have increased to the point of a rather large domestic truck driver shortage (I saw a stat of a 240,000 trucker shortage by 2020... these are $100K/year jobs for hard work. Compare that to this "airline pilot shortage" of about 2,000 new hires at the majors per year). On the rail side, there's a reason why Warren Buffet, the Sage from Omaha, bought BNSF (a business as unionized as any airline) in 2009. I offer that the domestic transportation sector's economic gains have far eclipsed the losses specific to the merchant marine sector. Here's the changes in truck tonnage:
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(source: http://www.roadscholar.com/investigative-report-2016-trucking-industry-forecastexpectations/)
Here's where I think we do Americans wrong: we don't help those hurt by industry shifts reposition themselves into growth sectors. As an example: coal miners can't magically become solar panel install technicians overnight without some type of help.
US Airlines account for more than 10 million jobs and 5% of the GDP. They aren't a small work force or a small part of the GDP and they are already creating jobs. With one airplane coming on property at a large legacy carrier it creates probably close to 50 new jobs with flight crew, mechanics, crew schedulers, etc. If an airline like NAI gets a new airplane they can off shore that work.
From a national security perspective, I believe trade to be a very stabilizing force. The threat country I am most worried about is North Korea -one who has chosen to not be part of a globalized system of trade and information. But what do I know? I'm only a national security professional tasked to take a strategic view of the world and then position my organization accordingly.
The Civil Reserve Air Fleet. Do we want a carrier flagged in another country flying around our troops?