CallawayGolf
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- Nov 13, 2009
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There is an easy way to determine market rates as opposed to industry standards and that is to advertise to fill the job at a certain rate and see if any qualified applicants show up. Are you honestly saying that if US Airways was allowed to offer NB Captain positions that paid 25% less than LOA93 rates, with non-contract benefits, that you don't think ANY qualified candidates would apply? Are you saying there is no one willing to fly commercial Airbus for less than what LOA93 pays? I'm skeptical to say the least. Is there no one willing to to be a police officer, fireman, bus driver, lineman or what have you that would not work for less than what a CBA calls for?Depends. Is that why the east rates are below market? Wouldn't you have to say the the RLA and our CBA have effectively kept us below market? I might say that collective bargaining agreements in general do that, but it is much the fault of poor management that would let them rise above what is a healthy balance, as what happened here with parity +1%, which was,IMHO, envisioned as a cutting provision. To "blame" is on the union, and maybe you are not trying to do that, is short sighted.
That's the very point I have been making. There are companies out there willing to do ground handling and AC maintenance work for less than what the company is forced to pay to represented workers. How can these outsource providers find people to take these jobs if no one was willing to work for less than the company already pays? The answer is that outsourcing is only feasible if union wage scales are in excess of market rates. Otherwise the company would be endlessly seeking to outsource but no one would take them up on it. The forces of supply and demand never go away and they cannot be avoided. The company has to deal with these same forces on the revenue side too. If supply exceeds demand, prices (or wages) must fall in response. If demand exceeds supply, prices (wages) will rise until demand falls back in line with the supply.
Government price fixes have been tried in order to not let market forces run their natural course, but they always fail too. The government could set the wages for all NB pilots to $150/hr but then they would also have to set the ticket prices for air travel, buses, ferries, gasoline, bicycles or any other mode of transportation in order to force consumers to make they choices government desires so that the airline can make a reasonable return on investment. That is essentially communism and that system really doesn't have much going for it that we should want to aspire to.