Los Angeles Times

In China, demand slumps for expat 737 Max pilots

Air carriers are hiring far fewer foreign pilots since the grounding of the Boeing jetliner.

- By Angus Whitley

Expatriate pilots flying Boeing Co.’s most popular plane for Chinese airlines used to be able to take their pick from dozens of jobs paying $300,000 plus perks thanks to a shortage of experience­d aviators there. The grounding of the 737 Max has changed that.

Chinese carriers have largely stopped hiring foreign pilots for Boeing’s main narrow-bodied jet, nine months after two crashes led to the grounding of the bestsellin­g 737 Max, according to recruitmen­t agencies. Airlines in China’s booming aviation market had been among the most enthusiast­ic buyers of the plane, accounting for 20% of a global fleet that now sits idle.

Chinese airlines still pay above-market wages, but the lengthy grounding has hit a swath of roles paying multiple times the median salary of a commercial pilot in the U.S. With no clear timeline for the Max’s reinstatem­ent after two lethal crashes, demand for expat pilots of any 737 variant in China has slowed to a trickle. Only a handful of the country’s airlines are recruiting for such jobs now.

“We’ve seen airlines suspend recruitmen­t of 737 pilots, period,” said Andre Al

lard, founder and president of AeroPerson­nel Global Inc., a Montreal pilot-recruitmen­t agency that has worked in China since 2007. “Many of these airlines had the Max on order. That evidently changed their plans.”

China’s growing middle class has put the country on track to be the world’s biggest aviation market in the coming decade. For many Chinese airlines, short-haul workhorses such as the 737 became the aircraft of choice in the travel frenzy. But China has long struggled to produce enough pilots on its own: By the end of 2016, Chinese carriers had more than 1,000 foreigners in their cockpits, double the number in 2010.

The decline in demand for overseas 737 pilots leaves many of the world’s bestpaid flying jobs — which come with a suite of perks such as signing bonuses, education allowances and free flights — to foreign Airbus skippers who try their hand in China.

Boeing is under intense scrutiny after the two disasters that killed 346 people. In October 2018, a Lion Air flight plunged into the sea shortly after taking off from Jakarta, and in March an Ethiopian Airlines jet crashed near Addis Ababa.

It’s not just those Max tragedies weighing on the sector. China’s economy is slowing, and the country is locked in a trade war with the U.S. that’s into its second year. As an American aerospace manufactur­er, Chicago-based Boeing has found itself in the middle of the dispute.

China was the first major jurisdicti­on to ground the Max plane, which has been banned from flying since March as Boeing tries to fix a flight-control system implicated in both crashes. The U.S. aviation regulator said in December it wouldn’t complete the aircraft’s required approvals until 2020. Even then, the Max could take months to reach airlines: European low-cost carrier Ryanair Holdings doesn’t expect deliveries before May.

Recruiter Wasinc Internatio­nal says the crisis at Boeing has spread to change the fortunes of aviators in China. Only seven or eight of the 28 Chinese airlines on

Wasinc’s books are hiring pilots, said the company’s chief executive, Dave Ross.

“Most of them are overstaffe­d because of the grounding of the Max,” Ross said by phone from Las Vegas. Just one or two are interested in 737 pilots, he said.

A Boeing spokesman declined to comment on demand for foreign 737 pilots in China. Of the country’s big three carriers, China Eastern Airlines Co. declined to comment, and Air China Ltd. and China Southern Airlines Co. didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Low-cost carrier China United Airlines, a unit of China Eastern, is still in the market for pilots, offering $288,000 a year to 737 captains on three-year contracts, according to Wasinc’s website. But that’s the site’s first ad for 737 pilots in China since July. The package includes a monthly education allowance of $1,000 for children in Chinese schools.

The drought’s unlikely to end until the Max is cleared by regulators and Boeing can resume deliveries. The company on Monday said it would halt production of the 737 Max in January. Chinese buyers have received 76 of the jets and are due to receive 181 more, according to data on Boeing’s website.

Although there’s less immediate need for 737 pilots in China, appetite for Airbus captains is unabated. “The only airlines hiring without much change are A320 operators,” Ross said.

For example, Juneyao Airlines in Shanghai is offering $299,000 a year to A320 captains ages 30 to 53. The role demands an average of just 14 hours flying a week and includes 50 days of paid leave and an overseas employment allowance of $666 a month, according to Wasinc. The pay climbs to an annual total of $311,000 — after tax — in the second term.

The Chinese airlines that are still hiring are getting more picky, said Tony Liu, a self-employed pilot agent in Guangzhou, northwest of Hong Kong. In particular, they take a dim view of errors during flight assessment­s, he said.

“If you really want to work here, you have to prepare pretty good,” Liu said. “If you make some mistake in the simulator, they will be very strict.”

China has also sought to lean less on foreigners. The number of Chinese licensed commercial pilots was 61,492 at the end of 2018, according to the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China. That’s up 54% from 2014 levels, but it’s still not enough. According to Boeing, China will need 8,090 new airplanes over the next 20 years, the bulk of them single-aisle aircraft — a category in which Boeing’s 737 competes with Airbus’ A320 family of planes.

To fly them all, China will require an additional 124,000 pilots, Boeing says. That’s the equivalent of 119 new hires every week for two decades.

All told, it’s still possible for overseas pilots to head home with $1 million in the bank after five years of flying in China, said Allard at AeroPerson­nel. It’s just that Airbus captains are more in favor now, he said.

“There is huge uncertaint­y about the Max,” Allard said. “It seems this thing is going on and on and on.”

Whitley writes for Bloomberg.

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