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No pilots are in a position to "drive the pay up" right now. Many will be faced with the prospect of losing their jobs. Some regional pilots will start to resent scope clauses that keep them from flying bigger jets. They will be willing to fly bigger jets for less than "standard" mainline rates (whatever that is anymore).
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Well, this is about to happen. ACA (Indenpedence Air, whatever) is getting ready to fly the A320s, so we'll see how that works for their pilot group. Mesa has been hinting at 737-300s, and their pilot group is already drawing a line in the sand on pay rates. Rumor had it that Mesa wanted them to fly the 737 for CRJ-900 pay. Most of the pilots said they wouldn't do it. So, now it's a question if Mesa will pull the Freedom stunt again to try to get the 737s on the cheap.
I've also read articles lately that say the regionals (along with the LCC) will soon dominate the domestic market. Somebody's gotta be wrong, they regionals can't dominate and crumble at the same time. If they are too tied into their mainline contracts and lack the foresight to strike out on their own, they will probably go down.
Anybody else see history starting to repeat itself here? When the airlines first started there were tons of smaller airlines, then the government forced most of them to merger into larger airlines. Pan Am was the only airline with international routes, so all the domestic airlines fed into Pan Am hubs for international flights. Looks like those large airlines might be spilitting back into the smaller airlines, and those small airlines may start feeding international airline hubs. Just an observation.