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Airline gender pay gap

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Airline gender pay gap

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Old 31st Mar 2018, 20:55
  #61 (permalink)  
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I have seen both sides of this. In a previous life I was a turboprop captain and worked for a small outfit where no women were employed. One of the most embarrassing (and a conversation I now feel ashamed even having had) was with a very competent lady pilot who I knew wanted to work there. I had to tell her that we did not take female pilots, which everyone knew to be true. It was just a fact of the guy who ran the airline and is completely indefensible, but that is how it was. I now work for easyJet and we are actively seeking applications from lady pilots. The harsh reality is that the sheer numbers of women pilots easyJet want do not really exist for a whole variety of cultural reasons, that we could debate endlessly. The same argument could be made for black male pilots from West Indian backgrounds. They simply do not exist in any numbers to employ in the first place - again for a whole variety of cultural reasons that are way outside of easyJet's control. The arguments are very difficult - should we employ men and women on an equal basis regarding ability or should we weight the dice in favour of women to correct a clear imbalance? There is no easy answer to this and easyJet will face this very problem. If we take women who are manifestly not as good as their male peers, that is there for the world to see and we are opening the door to big trouble. Do we, however, continue the practice of keeping this a male-dominated profession? I think not. I should also point out that our female captains are often incredibly talented and capable pilots who are a pleasure to observe in action. They just do not exist in the same numbers as their male colleagues, and that is a very hard problem to solve.

We at easyJet have virtually no female Training Captains (we do have a tiny number and are trying to increase it). Why is this? It is certainly not a deliberate policy, but more due to a host of practical problems faced by ladies at key stages in their lives. It is really to do with the fact that at the critical stages of selection for these types of jobs, ladies are typically married and having children. They are often part-time and pre-occupied with being mothers. To get through the Training Captain courses requires massive emotional effort and at critical times many women are simply not able to provide the continued effort required to get through. Often their husbands/partners are in big careers themselves and cannot provide the background support many wives do to husbands going through these courses themselves with young children. I used to have no sympathy for this, but have actually completely transformed my view. Forget company success and 'efficiency' for a moment. We as a society need to have professional women who form part of the breeding population, given that men cannot do so. To that end, we must remove invisible glass ceilings that effectively prevent advancement by skilled women. At easyJet I believe we are genuinely trying to do this, but the practicalities are enormous in doing so. I am not a manager, but merely a casual observer seeing how difficult it is practically-speaking for even the most talented married women with children to succeed at being a Training Captain. I am now of the view that we have to provide a level of support to women that most men do not require, simply because it is the women who have the lion's share of the work in bringing up children. We need to radically change our practices of the past and make it work for these talented ladies to advance up the system. Just my own opinion - and very different from how I used to feel. Others may disagree.
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Old 31st Mar 2018, 21:29
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Do we, however, continue the practice of keeping this a male-dominated profession?
Maybe I'm missing something from your comment,but I can't really see the problem with that.
This job naturally attracts more men than women just like nursing attracts more women than men,and is therefore normal that is a male dominated profession.
A woman who wishes to become a pilot can go to a flight school,get her license and if she's good enough she will get her job,just like any man does.
Basically I don't see any reason why we should forced them to become pilots when the doors are already open (a bit too much nowadays in my opinion)and they clearly tend to chose other career paths.

Last edited by FightFireWithFire; 31st Mar 2018 at 23:30.
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Old 2nd Apr 2018, 16:57
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Men are much more likely to go for the high paycheck, not many women do, work life balance is much more important, plus they feel much more secure at home each night.
Does it matter to passengers if a woman is flying?. In most cases they don't know unless the cockpit door is open boarding. However over the years I have flown as a passenger a great many times and I have NEVER heard a female pilot address passengers ???.
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Old 2nd Apr 2018, 18:27
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Respectfully not hearing a female flight crew make a PA doesn’t mean one isn’t present, it may happen that she could be onboard and is conducting line training and giving the other person the task of running each sector(s) and hence a PA by a male colleague.

Either way regardless of more or less women is NOT acceptable to discriminate against one gender in favour of the other.
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Old 2nd Apr 2018, 22:57
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This supposed bias for males making more for a similar but not same job is B.S. If you look at the exact same job in the airlines, the pay is the same.

If the feminazis are so concerned about inequity of pay, then look at porn industry, the women make way more than men. Proof of discrimination in society and I want extra hiring benefits throughout the economy because of it.
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Old 2nd Apr 2018, 23:56
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From another place:
I can drive a car. Why aren’t I paid the same as Lewis Hamilton?
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Old 3rd Apr 2018, 08:29
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Men are much more likely to go for the high paycheck
Society, in general, judges men by how well they provide for their family. Now days that means ‘what does he do for a living?’. It is for many men a defining element of their identity, critical to how they feel about themselves and to how they are received by others.
Men in low paid work are treated very differently while out and about in society than men in well paid jobs. (If you don’t believe me swap out your XF Jag and chinos for a 1993 Corolla and some beach shorts and go about your day.)
Women are usually judged with less emphasise on pay cheque, with personality, looks and family situation carrying more weight than with men.
What does that mean? Men, in general, are more concerned about what a job will pay than women and will quickly dismiss low paid opportunities regardless of how much they would enjoy the work, and will do decades of hard yards to secure higher paid jobs at the expense of health, lifestyle, and family harmony.
I know there are many thousands of exceptions ( on both sides) to the generalisation I’ve written above, but if a quantitative assessment was actually possible, it would favour my ramblings. ( Either that or people just didn’t like my Corolla when I was in between jobs).
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Old 3rd Apr 2018, 18:47
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And the winner is;

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-ry...-idUKKCN1HA1LY
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Old 3rd Apr 2018, 21:01
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67% gender pay gap for Ryan Air is certainly large. I propose an easy fix, if they simply paid all cabin crew First Officer salaries, and all Pursers Captain salaries,the gap would be close to zero. Job done, politicians satisfied.
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Old 4th Apr 2018, 00:44
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I'd be interested to know the % of female pilots who obtain a job within the first 12 months of completing their fATPL training compared to their male counterparts. I suspect there aren't too many unemployed female pilots looking for work.

I haven't read the previous 4 pages, but everyone seems to be saying the same kind of thing.

If I was a politician I'd be wondering if Manchester City FC pay their female playing staff the same as they pay their male....this is a pretty humungous gender pay gap considering their job title and role within the organisation is exactly the same...
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Old 4th Apr 2018, 07:59
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According to the BBC, the gender pay gap at Ryanair Ltd:

The average woman at this company is paid 71.8% less than the average man. That's a higher pay gap than the national average which is 18.4%. Women make up 3% of higher-paid jobs and 57% of lower-paid jobs.
I’m not sure which shocks me the most. Is it the fact that the person constructing the survey chose not to compare pay by function or the fact that government policy may be changed as a direct result of this survey. I’m not normally one to defend Ryanair but to the best of my knowledge, they pay by function not according to the tackle between your legs. Furthermore, there are no gender barriers preventing entry into any Ryanair job.

The problem, if there is one, is that girls (of both sexes) decide not to choose to fly aircraft and boys (of both sexes) do not apply to become cabin crew. Whose fault is this? It is certainly not Ryanair’s. They pay the same no matter what your gender. If this is a problem that needs fixing, the solution will not be found with government action based of this survey. In my opinion, the best thing that can happen as a result of this survey is that anyone who believes it has a value should be drowned in public to serve as a discouragement for any other idiot who wishes to waste public time and money.

PM

Last edited by Piltdown Man; 4th Apr 2018 at 08:35.
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Old 4th Apr 2018, 08:04
  #72 (permalink)  
 
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Originally Posted by Club World
Respectfully not hearing a female flight crew make a PA doesn’t mean one isn’t present, it may happen that she could be onboard and is conducting line training and giving the other person the task of running each sector(s) and hence a PA by a male colleague.

Either way regardless of more or less women is NOT acceptable to discriminate against one gender in favour of the other.
My observation was questioning Joe Publics prejudices against women pilots, are passengers more reassured hearing a male voice?. My own experience is that women are more careful pilots and less likely to take risks or cut margins
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Old 4th Apr 2018, 09:20
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The Reuters news article states that "Ryanair, Europe's largest low-cost carrier, said only eight out of its 554 pilots based in the United Kingdom are women".


Safe to assume that these eight in question are also on direct RYR contracts?


Or are they perhaps working as contractors?


And if the later, then how did they become included in the required disclosure?.


Just want to see if we are comparing equally employed individuals?.
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Old 4th Apr 2018, 10:08
  #74 (permalink)  
 
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In spain here we have the same Bull**** propaganda about the gender gap with the same bull**** arguments comparing Jobs between themselves that have nothing to do.
With that in mind i just have to think this is all a colective effort of some kind that is trying to drive europe in a communist direction.

SJw´s and that crap need to get banned and muffled, to this arguments i always answer with a:
" i would never ask for a Male CC to earn the same wage as a female pilot or for a male nurse to earn the same as a female doctor"


And i receive this with either yelling and insults or crickets.
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Old 4th Apr 2018, 11:27
  #75 (permalink)  
 
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PAY GAP

Is not the current preoccupation by Blessed Terrie Maybot, the British Prime Minister, rather off-target in highlighting the perceived gender gap in pay?

It looks good for a Conservative PM to be appearing to take a positive measure on the social justice front, as promised on the steps of number 10.

However, what has happened to the yawning chasm between the dosh shovelled into the trousers of (both genders) senior management and CEOs, amounting to multiples of hundreds of times the average worker-bees' remuneration?

Yes, it's got and is getting wider and the same group of overpaid wallahs get a nice payoff/pension pot/shares even when their incompetence results in the collapse of their company!

As the HR departments of all >250 employee companies slave away to provide this gender data, the real targets are escaping the spotlight which should be shone on their immoral practices.
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Old 4th Apr 2018, 15:47
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So dopy Theresa wants to do something about the gender pay gap? But she hasn't said what she wants to do. What can she do? So much legislation suffers from unintended consequences, but can you immagine where this could lead? I can: Ryanair pilots will reassign themselves a female gender - apparently, you can do that, in this bull**** PC world. Huge strapping blokes in manual jobs will see they lift and carry no more than their weakest female colleague. Men will refuse dirty and dangerous jobs unless there are 50% female colleagues. Mostly male hospital porters will demand to be paid as much as mostly female nurses. The potential chaos is endless.

But again - what exactly does the PM intend to actually do? Maybe she should worry about the gap between her ears instead?

Last edited by ZeBedie; 4th Apr 2018 at 17:23.
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Old 4th Apr 2018, 20:33
  #77 (permalink)  
 
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Women make different decisions to men, that’s why it has been eight years between mass shootings in the USA by women and why less women than men work on oil rigs.
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Old 4th Apr 2018, 22:46
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My airline published a new salary scheme for pilots recently. There are several categories and brackets but not surprisingly there's no separate category exist for female flight crew.
Gender pay gap is a myth spreaded by SJWs.
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Old 5th Apr 2018, 18:07
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Publishing gender pay figures for each job type is perfectly reasonable. Comparing a company as a whole is not.

Let's say you have 10 pilots (9 men, 1 woman) - each on £60k. You also have 10 cabin crew (9 women, 1 man) each on £20k.

There is Zero gender pay gap between pilots. There is zero pay gap between cabin crew. But magically the 10 men average £56k and the 10 women average £24k. Not because there exists a gender pay gap, buy because the men generally chose a career that pays more. Hardly the companies fault!
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Old 5th Apr 2018, 18:44
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In 2016 there were 20007 EASA licences issued by the CAA in circulation. Only 1013 of these were held by women. The whole industry needs to change if we are going to attract more females into the profession.
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