Here is how U.S. airline are trying to fix the pilot shortage
U.S. airlines are facing a severe pilot shortage. Management consulting firm Oliver Wyman estimates the industry is facing a deficit of about 8,000 pilots, or 11% of the total workforce, and says the shortfall could reach 30,000 pilots by 2025.
“It’s great to see that there’s such a need for pilots, but there’s a level of, how did this happen that you’re almost standing on a street corner, step right up, come be a pilot, I mean it, here’s some money,” said Dennis Tajer, spokesman for the Allied Pilots Association and a pilot with American Airlines. “That’s a sign that we have failed as an institution.”
To attract the next generation of pilots, carriers are moving more of their early training programs in-house.
Alaska Airlines’ Ascend Pilot Academy, launched earlier this year, offers would-be aviators financial incentives and employment opportunities. United Airlines has a similar program.
So what led to the shortage of pilots in the U.S., and what are carriers like United, Delta and Alaska doing to fix the problem?