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Old 03-29-2012 | 11:15 AM
  #94081  
76drvr
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Originally Posted by padre2992
There seems to be a few folks on this forum that have quality information, or maybe not. I've heard the Roger statistic of how SWA is 11% ahead of us, and the explantation. I did a little research using Form 41 data from the DOT. Here's what I found:

Average 2010 Wages and Salaries

http://web.mit.edu/airlinedata/www/2...0PERSONNEL.htm

Delta $142,800
SWA $166,573

Total 2010 Compensation (wages, benefits, and payroll taxes), i.e. more than what we see in our W2

http://web.mit.edu/airlinedata/www/2...Equivalent.htm

Delta $186,095
SWA $206,000

So I know it's 2010 data, and both airlines have received pay increases since then. Delta received a 4% pay increase each Jan. 1, and 6.52% and 4.8% profit sharing in 2010 and 2011. SWA has received raises as well.

It seems from my perspective that this contract will have to exceed SWA to have much support.

From the Form 41 data, the average Delta pilot will need to make an additional $24,000 in Wages and Salaries, or looking at from total compensation (perhaps unfairly because of payroll taxes), we need to retain any advantages in benefits with total compensation per pilot increasing about $20,000 ($206,000-$186,095).

I think this is a valid analysis of us compared to SWA and a way to measure if we meet or exceed SWA?
Interesting info, not what I expected. Thanks for posting it. More info is good.