I'd do pretty much anything to be getting paid six figures and flying a 747.
If you meet ATP requirements, apply to Atlas and you've got a very good chance of being hired.
Expect
maybe $50,000 the first year. Training pay is $1,600/mo and generally lasts for the first four months before you move up to $80/hr. first year min guarantee is 50. At minimum guarantee (62 hours after the first year), it'll take until year 9 to exceed $100,000. You never reach $100,000 as a 767 first officer. The most junior 747 captain would be at $117/hour so $87,000 at min guarantee.
The reality, for 747 crews, is much more than minimum guarantee, though. They'll work 20+ hour duty days flying worldwide. Nothing like landing at Bagram AB in Afghanistan after being awake for 16+ hours with another 5+ hour leg to go after a couple hours of unloading/loading. You'll be paid a bit more, though.
I'm too old for that garbage!
Seems like this is nothing but free market supply and demand determining wages.
It is, as modified by the Railway Labor Act. It is a slow process. Corrections take years to work themselves out. That's the process in which Atlas and ABX Air is currently engaged.
Both Atlas Air and ABX Air are unionized. They both belong to IBT Local 1224.
62 hours a month is barely even part time job. So it's $100k a year working less than half time.
That's like saying a salesman works only four hours a day because you're only counting the time he's talking to current and potential customers. It's like saying a programming is only working when he's typing code. Saying a supermarket employee is only working when actively checking out a customer or restocking a shelf.
It's a measure of productivity that works well as basis for pay calculations. It does not indicate how much time the pilot is working or is away from home.