Aviation professionals are seeing effects of pilot shortage: BAML
survey
The next time your flight is delayed, it might just be
that there's no one to fly the plane. There's a major pilot shortage in the U.S.
In 1987, the number of pilots in the U.S. stood around 827,000. By 2018, that
number decreased to just over 633,000, according to the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA).
And the problem is becoming more and more apparent,
according to a Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAML) survey done in conjunction
with Aviation Week. The survey gauged the perceptions of 917 aviation
professionals in the U.S. and Canada on the training and recruitment of pilots.
Forty-six percent say they already see a pilot shortage, and 36% expect to see a
shortage in the U.S. and Canada in the next five years.
One of the main
drivers of the shortage is that the U.S., on average, has some of the oldest
pilots in the world. This is especially true among those who fly transport. In
2002, the average U.S. transport pilot was 46, according to FAA data cited by
BAML, and by 2018, that number rose to 51. BAML cited data analysis from the
aviation training company CAE Inc. (CAE) showing that 42% of U.S. transport
pilots are in the 50-64 years range.
BAML analyst Ronald Epstein tells
Yahoo Finance that the modernization of the U.S. military has also played a role
in the nation's pilot shortage. "In North America, pilots have largely come out
of the military. Still, largely due to the operating capability of military
aircraft today, one aircraft can do more than an aircraft did 30 years ago. So
because of that, you have fewer pilots," he said.
Effect on
consumers
A service shortage within any industry is sure to affect consumers,
and the airline industry is no different. "Part of the cost structure of an
airline is labor," explains Epstein.
"As the number of pilots gets
tighter, like with any labor market, when you get tighter labor, pay will go up
... You'll probably see upward pressure on labor costs, and those labor costs
will get passed through to consumers," he added.
Boon for pilots
One group that
stands to benefit the most from a pilot shortage are pilots themselves. As the
law of supply and demand dictates, the fewer pilots, the more money they can
command for their aviation services.
The median pay for airline and
commercial pilots was $115,670 in 2018, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics. However, the training cost to become a commercial pilot ranges from
$80,000 to $100,000, BAML noted. BAML's survey showed that 65% of commercial
pilots, 68% of executive pilots, and 94% of freight pilots say that they are
underpaid.
BAML says the pilot shortage underpins the bull market for
companies with commercial training exposure, such as CAE, a Canadian company
that specializes in training for civil aviation, defense and security, among
others. The company currently owns 53% of the airline civil flight simulator
market share.
Epstein says the pilot shortage affects both commercial and
freight transportation. "It's kinda like a Pez candy, the pilots - the men and
women go up the canister and pop out the top. So, to the extent the regional
airlines and the freight operators will need pilots too - and where are they
pulling them from? So to the extent that it impacts the whole industry."
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/pilot-shortage-bank-of-america-merrill-lynch-survey-181836652.html
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