Go Back  Airline Pilot Central Forums > Airline Pilot Forums > Major > United
Latest CPI: inflation increases to 9.1% >

Latest CPI: inflation increases to 9.1%

Search

Notices

Latest CPI: inflation increases to 9.1%

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 07-13-2022 | 07:42 AM
  #11  
Aldo Raine's Avatar
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Mar 2020
Posts: 192
Likes: 0
From: Killin' Natsees
Default

Originally Posted by iahflyr
Ask your friends how many of them got a 9.1% merit pay raise over the past year (not because of a promotion) I’ll save you the trouble. The answer is zero.
See, there’s the problem. First, you have to be smart enough to know what “merit” means, and what a “merit” pay raise is. Maybe then you can be someone who advances our collective careers, rather than retarding them.
Reply
Old 07-13-2022 | 07:49 AM
  #12  
Excargodog's Avatar
Perennial Reserve
 
Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 14,183
Likes: 238
Default

Originally Posted by iahflyr
Ask your friends how many of them got a 9.1% merit pay raise over the past year (not because of a promotion) I’ll save you the trouble. The answer is zero.
Reply
Old 07-13-2022 | 07:56 AM
  #13  
Line Holder
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,734
Likes: 12
Default

Does anyone see any companies in the above list, because I do not…
Reply
Old 07-13-2022 | 08:04 AM
  #14  
Excargodog's Avatar
Perennial Reserve
 
Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 14,183
Likes: 238
Default

Originally Posted by iahflyr
Does anyone see any companies in the above list, because I do not…
Your assertion was “friends”, not “companies.”

Do you always change the argument when you are shown to be WRONG?
Reply
Old 07-13-2022 | 08:05 AM
  #15  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 2,159
Likes: 1
Default

All news outlets reporting that inflation now at 40 year all time high.

How does this inflationary news affect our current POS TA? What do we want for future TA's?
Reply
Old 07-13-2022 | 08:06 AM
  #16  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 2,159
Likes: 1
Default

Originally Posted by iahflyr
Ask your friends how many of them got a 9.1% merit pay raise over the past year (not because of a promotion) I’ll save you the trouble. The answer is zero.
My doctor raised his prices by 12%.
Reply
Old 07-13-2022 | 01:10 PM
  #17  
Excargodog's Avatar
Perennial Reserve
 
Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 14,183
Likes: 238
Default

By
Suman Bhattacharyyv
April 21, 2022 5:30 am ETPRINT
TEXT

Length (4 minutes)Wage inflation in the technology sector is accelerating, pressuring companies to boost compensation for key roles by 20% or more as they compete for a limited pool of workers skilled in areas such as cloud computing and data science.

There is no single source of data on all tech jobs, but it is clear from a range of market analysts and executives that demand for labor in the tech sector is on the rise. During the first quarter, U.S. employers posted 1.1 million tech jobs, an increase of 43% from a year earlier, according to information technology trade group CompTIA.

Demand for workers to fill those jobs has been surging since the pandemic began, prompting companies to turn to remote work and other digital initiatives. Inflation at a 40-year-high and the war in Ukraine disrupting tech and outsourcing hubs in Europe also are pushing compensation for tech workers higher.

The tech roles in greatest demand include cloud computing architects, data scientists and modelers, and machine learning experts. Staffing firm Mondo, an Addison Group company, said at the high end of the compensation range, cloud architects saw average salary increases of 25% between 2020 and this year, while average salaries for software engineers rose 11% over the same period.

The rising cost of hiring and retaining top tech talent is creating challenges for chief information officers and other tech leaders and has even caught the attention of chief executive officers.

“It’s stunning,” said Michael Burns, co-founder and executive chairman of iDEAL Semiconductor Devices and managing director of the Murray Hill Group venture capital and private-equity firm. Mr. Burns said wage increases in the tech sector can top 20%, and in hot markets such as Austin, Texas, they can hit 30%.

NEWSLETTER SIGN-UP

WSJ | CIO Journal
The Morning Download delivers daily insights and news on business technology from the CIO Journal team.


SUBSCRIBECIOs and other tech chiefs are under pressure to convince board members to approve higher spending for tech salaries that may exceed pay levels for other jobs, according to Scott Spradley, executive vice president and chief technology and automation officer atTyson Foods Inc. Given the tight labor market, the cost of running and maintaining IT operations is on the rise, and the cost of investing in innovation is going up at an even faster pace, he said.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/tech-wa...es-11650533400






Companies are giving raises to new hires after just weeks on the job and reviewing salaries multiple times a year as bosses come to terms with a soaring level of inflation that is causing a global cost of living crisis, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Asset manager T. Rowe Price last month announced a 4% raise for 85% of its employees starting from July 1, according to the Journal. That raise, which is in addition to the company's year-end salary adjustments, included new hires who had joined the company only a few weeks back, the company's head of human resources told the Journal.

A low unemployment rate has created a competitive labor market that has seen the scales tip in favor of jobseekers. Some workers are finding that now more than ever, switching jobs results in a larger paycheck. In response, companies are looking to stem employee attrition by accounting for inflation in their pay raises.

US employers had accounted for salary increases of 3.9% in 2022, according to a December report from think tank Conference Board. However, US inflation recently reached a 40-year record 8.6% in May. Meanwhile, Pearl Meyer, a compensation consultancy, found that 70% of organizations had implemented larger salary increases this year compared to 2021.


It’s the name of the game - WHATEVER THE MARKET WILL BEAR

And in this market for pilots, no one but a fool will vote for a contract that doesn’t contain REAL gains in BOTH pay and work rules.
Reply
Old 07-13-2022 | 01:31 PM
  #18  
Line Holder
 
Joined: Jan 2021
Posts: 246
Likes: 7
Default

Originally Posted by Wingedbeast
But at least the mean tweets are gone.
Honestly I used to think that was it but now people aren’t satisfied. Look at all these protests over gender, abortion, diversity, etc. Never satisfied, always complaining, always thinking they have the final solution
Reply
Old 07-13-2022 | 01:34 PM
  #19  
New Hire
 
Joined: Jul 2022
Posts: 1
Likes: 0
From: B756 FO
Default

Not sure how inflation normally plays into negotiations. This is my first airline contract with a union and just came off probation so I've been reading these threads. Inflation keeps coming up but I don't know how unions address inflation in the middle of a contract. Isn't inflation a snapshot in time that goes up and down? If contracts go on for 3, 4 or more years pay isn't changing except for a few percent raises each year. A contract is a moment in time and things are changing. I know my circumstances for my family since my wife's income varies each year with bonuses and stock prices.
Reply
Old 07-13-2022 | 01:55 PM
  #20  
Excargodog's Avatar
Perennial Reserve
 
Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 14,183
Likes: 238
Default

Originally Posted by FullWinger
Not sure how inflation normally plays into negotiations. This is my first airline contract with a union and just came off probation so I've been reading these threads. Inflation keeps coming up but I don't know how unions address inflation in the middle of a contract. Isn't inflation a snapshot in time that goes up and down? If contracts go on for 3, 4 or more years pay isn't changing except for a few percent raises each year. A contract is a moment in time and things are changing. I know my circumstances for my family since my wife's income varies each year with bonuses and stock prices.
The problem is the RLA which prescribes a long circuitous path before allowing a (generally very brief) strike coupled with the fact that seniority eventually locks you into one employer which inhibits your ability to move to the highest bidder as well as the ability of management (because of the RLA) to stretch things out for years, benefitting from the fact that even if they eventually do raise rates, they have benefitted from the time value of the money (and depending upon the payback period the money itself) they saved by not bargaining in good faith until forced to the table.

Now in years of 1-2% inflation, that’s bad enough (typically compounded over 3-4 years) but we have entered a hyper inflationary era. No, we aren’t seeing DAILY 20% spikes in inflation like Argentina or the Weimar Republic, but we have MASSIVELY expanded the money supply without expanding goods and services so that’s going to drive things up for awhile.


image uploader

https://www.npr.org/2021/11/19/10569...ast-presidents





You may read back about the Nixon-Carter era (in fairness to Carter, Nixon’s wage and price controls set him up for disaster) but it really doesn’t matter what CBAs have done in the past, because the only way pilots can hold their purchasing power when you are seeing annual inflation rates of 6-8% is to incorporate some sort of an inflation index into the contract.
Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
AlettaOcean
United
7
07-10-2022 03:52 PM
Excargodog
Money Talk
139
07-07-2022 11:51 AM
Beewatcher2
United
751
06-25-2022 11:48 AM
UnskilledFXer
FedEx
46
09-20-2015 06:46 AM
ryan1234
Money Talk
4
02-18-2009 07:16 PM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



Your Privacy Choices