Jump to content

Recommended Posts

matthew123 Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I agree - maybe it's the other airline staff who

> should be striking. Would the BA staff have

> striked if they knew they would lose their travel

> perks?


I think they knew they would, I knew before the strike and I'm not connected. It was very clear.

Vinceayres wrote:-

On a purely selfish note I hope they do go bust as it would open up a lot of slots that they block other customer focused airlines from getting. I haven't flown BA for years as they are overpriced cr*p



I positively avoid using them too, and go to great lengths to find better, which is not too difficult unless you are travelling on all those routes they monopolise. Losing some of them has changed their fortune but not before time.


If they cannot find a way to compete on a day to day basis then they should be allowed to fail, I'm convinced it will be an improvement for the travelling public.


When they had the last strike I noticed that east dulwich became a quiet village with out all the plane noise. It seemed that predominantly BA were the ones who flew across London, and the sooner that stops the better off ED will be.

BA is relatively cash rich at the moment and is covering most of its flights either through its own resources, wet hire leased aircraft of through its OneWorld alliance partners.


It seems to have made a strategic decision that its short to medium term financial and goodwill losses will be out-weighed by getting rid of expensive and out-dated terms and conditions.


As each strike passes BA will become better at covering its flights, whilst Unite will run out of funds for strike-pay which is currently being paid to Strikers.


I think that Unite members will find themselves worse off than if they had accepted some reduction in terms and confitions through negotiation. However back to work they will eventually have to go.


Willie Walsh was brought in to do this very thing, as he did with Aer Lingus, which was a loss making, formerly state owned airline that would have gone bust if it hadnt been pruned. See KLM, Sabena, Swissair, Maersk, Alitalia, etc as examples of what happends when it all goes wrong - they all went bust, a few of the brands have been brought back, but not as new, small airlines, not as major players.

MP wrote:-

See KLM, Sabena, Swissair, Maersk, Alitalia, etc as examples of what happends when it all goes wrong - they all went bust, a few of the brands have been brought back, but not as new, small airlines, not as major players.



In this global circus BA cannot compete and are deluding themselves if they think they can compare with Cathay Pacific, whom in my opinion are better organized, give more leg room, are cheaper, and provide superb consumer service, other than those few minor points there is little difference.

They can compete, because like Cathay Pacific they are based in a major transport node at the edge of a huge continent which is also a major destination point in its own right (Britain vs Hong Kong). Leg room, etc are not reasons for BA going out of business.


They have the experience, the profile and importantly, the slots to be successfull. They also have a mill-stone round their necks which has killed off those former state owned airlines that didnt manage to modernise.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Hello,  I feel as though our apartment is damp. I would like to borrow a dehumidifier to ascertain whether it is or not. Does anyone have a dehumidifier that I could borrow for a week?  thank you,    Brigid
    • Post much better this Xmas.  Sue posted about whether they send Xmas cards; how good the post is,  is relevant.  Think I will continue to stay off Instagram!
    • These have reduced over the years, are "perfect" lives Round Robins being replaced by "perfect" lives Instagram posts where we see all year round how people portray their perfect lives ?    The point of this thread is that for the last few years, due to issues at the mail offices, we had delays to post over Christmas. Not really been flagged as an issue this year but I am still betting on the odd card, posted well before Christmas, arriving late January. 
    • Two subjects here.  Xmas cards,  We receive and send less of them.  One reason is that the cost of postage - although interestingly not as much as I thought say compared to 10 years ago (a little more than inflation).  Fun fact when inflation was double digits in the 70s cost of postage almost doubled in one year.  Postage is not a good indication of general inflation fluctuating a fair bit.  The huge rise in international postage that for a 20g Christmas card to Europe (no longer a 20g price, now have to do up to 100g), or a cheapskate 10g card to the 'States (again have to go up to the 100g price) , both around a quid in 2015, and now has more than doubled in real terms.  Cards exchanged with the US last year were arriving in the New Year.  Funnily enough they came much quicker this year.  So all my cards abroad were by email this year. The other reason we send less cards is that it was once a good opportunity to keep in touch with news.  I still personalise many cards with a news and for some a letter, and am a bit grumpy when I get a single line back,  Or worse a round robin about their perfect lives and families.  But most of us now communicate I expect primarily by WhatApp, email, FB etc.  No need for lightweight airmail envelope and paper in one.    The other subject is the mail as a whole. Privitisation appears to have done it no favours and the opening up of competition with restrictions on competing for parcel post with the new entrants.  Clearly unless you do special delivery there is a good chance that first class will not be delivered in a day as was expected in the past.   Should we have kept a public owned service subsidised by the tax payer?  You could also question how much lead on innovation was lost following the hiving off of the national telecommunications and mail network.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...