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Quoting Jamie2k9 (Reply 1): but always got the impression AF was the one dragging KLM down with unions more so? KL should offload AF if my assumption is right! |
Quoting factsonly (Thread starter): advises AF to sell KL.......... |
Quoting Jamie2k9 (Reply 1): KL should offload AF if my assumption is right! |
Quoting Jamie2k9 (Reply 1): I've always had that same feeling as well. Especially with AF's recent labor struggles... |
Quoting burnsie28 (Reply 3): I've always been on the understanding that KLM was profitable and AF wasn't. |
Quoting rta (Reply 4): This will need some more explaining. |
Quoting factsonly (Thread starter): - He states to love France and the French, but not French politicians who he says, are destroying their country. |
Quoting LHRResident91 (Reply 7): More great MOL publicity |
Quoting burnsie28 (Reply 3): Quoting Jamie2k9 (Reply 1): Not overly familiar with AF/KLM issues but always got the impression AF was the one dragging KLM down with unions more so? KL should offload AF if my assumption is right! I've always been on the understanding that KLM was profitable and AF wasn't. |
Quoting Aesma (Reply 12): The labor laws he's talking about are things like "you must pay someone who works for you", even if it's on the ground, or "you must pay the taxes that finance the services your employees use" like health care and pensions, both public programs in France. |
Quoting EC99 (Reply 13): |
Quoting kl911 (Reply 10): I love this guy. He is one of the best aviation guys around. He sees things others don't see or don't want to see and talks openly about it. As for: [quote=factsonly,reply=0]- - Never to operate from CDG No sane person wants to fly to / connect in CDG. - Ryanair will not have a French base with current employment laws. Those laws are exactly the reason AF is lossmaking, too often on strike, and dragging KLM under. - With ME3 competition, AF will no longer be able to cross-subsidize short-haul with profits from long-haul flying. Leave shorthaul to the shorthaul specialists. seats are the same, coffee is too, and that's all you need on a 90 min flight. |
Quoting DXBDFWHGA (Reply 11): I'm not a fan of Ryanair but I agree with O'Leary. |
Quoting JoeCanuck (Reply 14): You have to be specific when you talk about the wages the ME3 pay. Their crews are very competitively paid, very often better than average, because all of their crews are expats. They have to be coerced to move from their homes and live in the Middle East...and they have to be paid well to stay. |
Quoting factsonly (Thread starter): - Ryanair will not have a French base with current employment laws. |
Quoting factsonly (Thread starter): - He states to love France and the French, but not French politicians who he says, are destroying their country. |
Quoting Jamie2k9 (Reply 1): Not overly familiar with AF/KLM issues but always got the impression AF was the one dragging KLM down with unions more so? KL should offload AF if my assumption is right! |
Quoting jeffh747 (Reply 2): I've always had that same feeling as well. Especially with AF's recent labor struggles... |
Quoting dank (Reply 9): On paper. Taxes are lower in the Netherlands than in France so they shift money on paper to push profits to the lower tax region. |
Quoting Aesma (Reply 12): The labor laws he's talking about are things like "you must pay someone who works for you", even if it's on the ground, or "you must pay the taxes that finance the services your employees use" like health care and pensions, both public programs in France. |
Quoting fururefa (Reply 16): But crews are still significantly cheaper given that salaries are tax free in - I believe - all three ME3 locales |
Quoting fururefa (Reply 16): and social costs are significantly lower. |
Quoting Aesma (Reply 12): The labor laws he's talking about are things like "you must pay someone who works for you", even if it's on the ground, or "you must pay the taxes that finance the services your employees use" like health care and pensions, both public programs in France. |
Quoting factsonly (Thread starter): - Never to operate from CDG |
Quoting N1120A (Reply 17): Quoting dank (Reply 9): On paper. Taxes are lower in the Netherlands than in France so they shift money on paper to push profits to the lower tax region. KL is generally a more profitable operation, and always has been better run. |
Quoting fururefa (Reply 16): crews are still significantly cheaper given that salaries are tax free in - I believe - all three ME3 locales - and social costs are significantly lower. So while take home pay may be higher, overall labor costs are still significantly less than European (and American to a lesser extent) carriers. |
Quoting N1120A (Reply 17): So, he is basically a right wing nut. |
Quoting JoeCanuck (Reply 14): Quoting EC99 (Reply 13): I wouldn't be so quick to jump to conclusions. You have to be specific when you talk about the wages the ME3 pay. Their crews are very competitively paid, very often better than average, because all of their crews are expats. They have to be coerced to move from their homes and live in the Middle East...and they have to be paid well to stay. |
Quote: Sell KLM and close the routes that are losing money. Air France has done nothing to develop KLM. Instead Air France and KLM are competing with each other, which is why the Dutch are not happy. And then sell 20-25% of Air France to one of the Gulf airlines. |
Quoting Aesma (Reply 12): The labor laws he's talking about are things like "you must pay someone who works for you", even if it's on the ground, or "you must pay the taxes that finance the services your employees use" like health care and pensions, both public programs in France. |
Quoting JoeCanuck (Reply 14): You have to be specific when you talk about the wages the ME3 pay. Their crews are very competitively paid, very often better than average, because all of their crews are expats. They have to be coerced to move from their homes and live in the Middle East...and they have to be paid well to stay. |
Quoting JoeCanuck (Reply 14): The ME3 also pay for employee housing when they are at their base...and at the worst, it's better than how US regional pilots are forced to live. |
Quoting JoeCanuck (Reply 14): They also pay the same for their aircraft as anyone else...except when they get a volume discount. |
Quoting usdcaguy (Reply 18): The labor laws he's talking about are things like "you must pay someone who works for you", even if it's on the ground, or "you must pay the taxes that finance the services your employees use" like health care and pensions, both public programs in France. Well said. France would not have one of the best healthcare systems in the world if it weren't for the taxes collected by the French government. The Anglo-Saxon model has proven itself to be cruel and inhumane; I would much rather live in a social democracy than a neoliberal jungle, even if that means waiting a few days to travel when workers leverage their right to strike. |
Quoting dank (Reply 19): Corporate tax rate in France is 33.3%; in the Netherlands 25%. Don't kid yourself that they slide profits into the Netherlands to reduce their burden. Thats a 25% reduction in tax burden. All perfectly legal, but hard to tease out where the profits really are because you shift costs around the system in order to shift the profits. |
Quoting usdcaguy (Reply 18): Well said. France would not have one of the best healthcare systems in the world if it weren't for the taxes collected by the French government. The Anglo-Saxon model has proven itself to be cruel and inhumane; I would much rather live in a social democracy than a neoliberal jungle, even if that means waiting a few days to travel when workers leverage their right to strike. |
Quoting hohd (Reply 31): If Ryan air does not want to fly much to Paris, that is AF's gain, as Paris is the No. 1 tourist destination in the world. |
Quoting galleypower (Reply 26): So the playing field is not so even. I dont say it not legal, its just there and can not be ignored. |
Quoting aerokiwi (Reply 22): How about a businessman stating his perspective as someone responsible for running a business? |
Quoting aerokiwi (Reply 22): I don't think many foreign companies are leaping at the chance to operate in France. |
Quoting bobdino (Reply 25): O'Leary specifically calls out the fact that they have staff in Germany but not in France. And Germany is no cheaper to have employees in than France... |
Quoting mercure1 (Reply 30): I dont know what French health care system you are familiar with, but if you want true care and dont take pleasure in waiting inside a big national bureaucracy you don't rely on the state and purchase separate private health care policy. The French system is also so good, they are buying people airline tickets out of the country to places like Turkey. Some basic things like dentistry are a challenge to arrange so French go on vacation to places like the US and have mysterious dental problems which they must attend to and then the French state reimburses. Social health programs are a facade. They might look good on surface but soon enough the ugly reality become apparent the more one deals with it. |
Quoting Aesma (Reply 35): You think wrong, many do, France is in the top ten for foreign investment. |
Quoting mercure1 (Reply 30): |
Quoting kl911 (Reply 10): No sane person wants to fly to / connect in CDG. |
Quoting kl911 (Reply 10): No sane person wants to fly to / connect in CDG. |
Quoting icarus75 (Reply 40): Can you please ellaborate or is it only bashing for bashing? I travel all over Europe and I can tell you that CDG is far from being the worse! |
Quoting billreid (Reply 41): |
Quoting kl911 (Reply 10): No sane person wants to fly to / connect in CDG. |
Quoting Aesma (Reply 12): The labor laws he's talking about are things like "you must pay someone who works for you", even if it's on the ground, or "you must pay the taxes that finance the services your employees use" like health care and pensions, both public programs in France. |
Quoting usdcaguy (Reply 18): France would not have one of the best healthcare systems in the world if it weren't for the taxes collected by the French government. |
Quoting AIR MALTA (Reply 32): What Ryanair wants to do is Social Dumping! Hiring in France and paying taxes and social contributions to Ireland. This has to stop. |
Quoting LawnDart (Reply 33): I find it interesting that Volotea, Vueling and especially EasyJet apparently have no difficulty doing business in France. Not sure they have crew bases there - I imagine at least EasyJet does with their rather large ops in CDG and ORY. |
Quoting Aesma (Reply 35): You think wrong, many do, France is in the top ten for foreign investment. |
Quoting Aither (Reply 37): The fact is that the Paris airport are no longer the bad airports they used to be. We have to be honest and stop the french bashing. CDG is good, clean, efficient - at least when you fly with Air France. |
Quoting TYCOON (Reply 43): billreid, you state that your experience was "some years back"... so when was the last time you've transitted through CDG? Things have certainly improved... Granted, it is very rare that I transit through CDG as I live in Paris (though not French), but in speaking to well heeled travellers, the experience has improved beyond comparison to the old CDG. Furthermore, as an originating airport, I much prefer CDG than AMS. AMS is my 8th most visited airport out of 311 worldwide and I have to say the security lines are horrible, even for a Flying Blue Platinum For Lifer like me. I had a friend who was traveling with me, but didn't have SkyPriority privileges and it took him nearly an hour to clear security (!!!) and this was last November. I also find airport staff more pleasant in either ORY or CDG than AMS (and definitely than either FRA or LHR). I'll always get some sort of comment from them about my US passport but speaking French, and then they will try their English out on me... And always, as I gather my things from the conveyor belt, a "Bon Voyage" farewell (and that is honestly no exaggeration and whether I am Sky Priority or just flying Vueling out of ORY with no privileges). So to each his/her own... My experience demonstates that yours is no more valid/no less valid than mine. |
Quoting billreid (Reply 41): I originated at TXL, left on time and almost missed my connection at CDG because the arrival gate was so far away it took over 60 minutes to get quickly to my connecting flight. |
Quoting billreid (Reply 41): you have to mentally lacking to transfer at CDG. |
Quoting billreid (Reply 42): Icarus, you are French and are looking through very heavily tinted glasses. |