sheldon957
Pre-Flight
Number of Pilots Dimenish, but CFI's go up!
We have all heard how the number of pilots is going down every year, and here is the FAA stats to prove it.
http://www.faa.gov/data_statistics/...ivil_airmen_statistics/2007/media/07-air1.xlshttp://www.faa.gov/data_statistics/a...ia/07-air1.xls
But the thing that I noticed, is the number of CFI's has gone up EVERY year in the table, while the number of pilots has gone down.
From the high in 1999 until 2000, the number of pilots decreased from 635,472 to 590,349, roughly a 7% decrease. The number of CFI's increased from 79,694 to 92,179, almost a 16% increase. Roughly, 1 out of 8 pilots in 1999 was a CFI, or 12.5% of the pilot population. In 2007, 1 out of 6 were CFI or 16%.
The number of students also fell during that time from 97,359 to 84,339, about a 13½% decrease.
In 2003, there was approximately 1 CFI for every student. In 2007 CFI's outnumber students by 10%. I realize that many CFI's no longer teach, and many may have never taught at all, but the numbers are odd.
No wonder CFI's don't earn much. Too many of them. And I am trying to join the ranks. Also, I am not looking just to build time and jump to some airline job like 90% of CFI's are. I would just like to teach, for teaching's sake, to add pilots to our ranks.
We have all heard how the number of pilots is going down every year, and here is the FAA stats to prove it.
http://www.faa.gov/data_statistics/...ivil_airmen_statistics/2007/media/07-air1.xlshttp://www.faa.gov/data_statistics/a...ia/07-air1.xls
But the thing that I noticed, is the number of CFI's has gone up EVERY year in the table, while the number of pilots has gone down.
From the high in 1999 until 2000, the number of pilots decreased from 635,472 to 590,349, roughly a 7% decrease. The number of CFI's increased from 79,694 to 92,179, almost a 16% increase. Roughly, 1 out of 8 pilots in 1999 was a CFI, or 12.5% of the pilot population. In 2007, 1 out of 6 were CFI or 16%.
The number of students also fell during that time from 97,359 to 84,339, about a 13½% decrease.
In 2003, there was approximately 1 CFI for every student. In 2007 CFI's outnumber students by 10%. I realize that many CFI's no longer teach, and many may have never taught at all, but the numbers are odd.
No wonder CFI's don't earn much. Too many of them. And I am trying to join the ranks. Also, I am not looking just to build time and jump to some airline job like 90% of CFI's are. I would just like to teach, for teaching's sake, to add pilots to our ranks.
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