jtrain609
Antisocial Monster
I believe the point was that you're more competetive with a degree and instructing experience, so when the requirements go up in economy's downturn, you're the one staying afloat.
Anyway, I agree with most of what jtrain said, but I'd like to add that because of economy of scale and technological advances, being a pilot won't be such a hot high profile job as it once was (or still is?), I think it probably won't be as competetive in the future as it still is today. However, that's just my opinion on the subject.
Fair enough, and the forum has gone around and around on this issue. From my perspective of sitting in the cockpit of a fairly automated aircraft with my background in IT I'd say you couldn't be more wrong. Things fail on these aircraft more often than people would admit, and it takes a decent amount of systems knowledge to make these things work when they break. And it's not like your FBO where something breaks and the aircraft is grounded. We can defer a lot of stuff in these airliners and they'll still operate. If they couldn't do that, they wouldn't make the airline any money.
You know how busy you'd be if the APU, autopilot and FMS are all MELed? You'll earn your yearly paycheck on those days, and as far as the company is concerned you're expected to operate the flights just as if nothing had failed, on time all the time and with as much efficiency as possible.