WorldTraveler
Corn Field
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2003
- Messages
- 21,709
- Reaction score
- 10,662
Bob,
I am very much aware that trickle down economics and a global economy have fallen far short of delivering what was promised but I think you are a tad jaded to not appreciate that there are still well-run businesses and business principles that really do positively affect average workers. But you also fail to look at the overall productivity improvements in the larger US economy; all US workers are producing more than ever.... much of that is the necessity of protecting their jobs against foreign workers but airline employees are far from the only ones who have been affected.
First, I disagree that the bankruptcy courts alone and not market forces have set airline wages rates. The data on compensation for airline employees clearly shows that those employees lost about 20% of their compensation during the period their airlines were in bankruptcy - but it was a pretty consistent percentage that was taken off of existing wage rates. In the 3 years or so since all of the network airlines have been out of bankruptcy, average compensation per employee has returned to about 90% of what was being made prior to bankruptcy. Granted, there is a loss because of a lack of cost of living adjustments but the largest component of inflation in the US has been healthcare costs... The notion that market forces were lost in the bankruptcy process is simply not accurate. Airline wage levels were established prior to bankruptcy largely from the regulated period of the industry and there have been percentage adjustments to airline wages but the system of compensation is still intact and actually not that far from pre-BK levels.
It is also worth noting that AA employees ON AVERAGE (total compensation per employee) make almost the identical amount as their network peers that did go through BK- except for CO employees who make about 10% less in total compensation. What AA did not gain is workrule changes that other airlines obtained in BK.
Second, it is not at all supportable to say that pushing wages down is the goal of business or that profits go up when wages go down. That statement is no more valid than to say that if you buy the cheapest machines, your profits will go up. There are companies who pay above average wages because their employees produce above average results for the company -no different than it would be for a company to buy the top of the line XYZ machine because it can produce XYZs faster than other machines. Among airlines, you need only look at WN and its employees to see this principle in aciton.
Despite what you would like to believe, there are executives that get TERMINATED for not performing.
And finally, yes, DL's philosophy has long been that they will attempt to treat their employees as good as employees at airlines who have unions - such that DL employees in many ways have the benefits of a union without having a union.
Obviously there are alot of PMNW people who are not convinced that strategy will work given that nearly 50% of frontline employee groups that have released voting results still want a union including a number of PMDL people, but the majority of DL employees still say they prefer DL's traditional employee-employer relationship.
I am very much aware that trickle down economics and a global economy have fallen far short of delivering what was promised but I think you are a tad jaded to not appreciate that there are still well-run businesses and business principles that really do positively affect average workers. But you also fail to look at the overall productivity improvements in the larger US economy; all US workers are producing more than ever.... much of that is the necessity of protecting their jobs against foreign workers but airline employees are far from the only ones who have been affected.
First, I disagree that the bankruptcy courts alone and not market forces have set airline wages rates. The data on compensation for airline employees clearly shows that those employees lost about 20% of their compensation during the period their airlines were in bankruptcy - but it was a pretty consistent percentage that was taken off of existing wage rates. In the 3 years or so since all of the network airlines have been out of bankruptcy, average compensation per employee has returned to about 90% of what was being made prior to bankruptcy. Granted, there is a loss because of a lack of cost of living adjustments but the largest component of inflation in the US has been healthcare costs... The notion that market forces were lost in the bankruptcy process is simply not accurate. Airline wage levels were established prior to bankruptcy largely from the regulated period of the industry and there have been percentage adjustments to airline wages but the system of compensation is still intact and actually not that far from pre-BK levels.
It is also worth noting that AA employees ON AVERAGE (total compensation per employee) make almost the identical amount as their network peers that did go through BK- except for CO employees who make about 10% less in total compensation. What AA did not gain is workrule changes that other airlines obtained in BK.
Second, it is not at all supportable to say that pushing wages down is the goal of business or that profits go up when wages go down. That statement is no more valid than to say that if you buy the cheapest machines, your profits will go up. There are companies who pay above average wages because their employees produce above average results for the company -no different than it would be for a company to buy the top of the line XYZ machine because it can produce XYZs faster than other machines. Among airlines, you need only look at WN and its employees to see this principle in aciton.
Despite what you would like to believe, there are executives that get TERMINATED for not performing.
And finally, yes, DL's philosophy has long been that they will attempt to treat their employees as good as employees at airlines who have unions - such that DL employees in many ways have the benefits of a union without having a union.
Obviously there are alot of PMNW people who are not convinced that strategy will work given that nearly 50% of frontline employee groups that have released voting results still want a union including a number of PMDL people, but the majority of DL employees still say they prefer DL's traditional employee-employer relationship.