Preview

Labour Unrest

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1770 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Labour Unrest
LABOUR UNREST & ITS CAUSES & IMPACTS
“KINGFISHER AIRLINES”

Kingfisher Airlines Ltd , controlled by liquor baron Vijay Mallya, cancelled all flights through Thursday because of labour unrest and was ordered by the aviation regulator to submit a revival plan before it can fly again.
The heavily indebted airline, which has been months behind on salary payments, saw its operations come to a grinding halt on Monday after disgruntled engineers responsible for aircraft safety checks threatened other employees reporting to work. | |
While protests by frustrated Kingfisher employees and flight cancellations are not new, the latest episode will undermine confidence about the airline's viability at a time when the former No.2 carrier by market share is seeking fresh funds to stay aloft.
"Right now the best thing for Mallya would be to close the airline completely, get his act together, make a restructuring plan, see where he can money to invest in it, negotiate with foreign investors and then come out with a brand new plan of action in front of him," said Rajan Mehra, the India head of U.S.-based private jet operator Universal Aviation, and an aviation expert.
Kingfisher is struggling under a $1.4 billion debt load after borrowing heavily to expand its fleet. Banks have refused to lend Kingfisher more money unless it can secure new capital from investors.
As of February, State Bank of India , the country's top lender, had an exposure of 14.08 billion rupees to Kingfisher. No. 2 state-run lender Punjab National Bankwas owed 7.04 billion rupees, while IDBI Bank Ltd had an exposure of 6.96 billion rupees.
Kingfisher is in talks with a couple of airlines for investment and hoped discussions would conclude in three months, the aviation regulator said on Tuesday.
Last month, India allowed foreign airlines to buy stakes of up to 49% in local carriers, a long-awaited policy move lobbied for by Kingfisher and seen as providing a lifeline to the country's

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    U.S. Airlines face many issues today that ultimately will lower profits. Heightened Security in airports, less people willing to fly and a slumping economy have put the airline industry at a disadvantage.…

    • 1033 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Problems with Jetblue

    • 338 Words
    • 2 Pages

    JetBlue Airways decided to wait out the storm and found it impossible and unable to continue flights. JetBlue Airways began receiving irate passengers due to being bumped or routed to New York. As problems progressed, passengers found them self’s stranded and no Kiosks available through JetBlue Airways to reschedule or get a fund. All communication lines were tied up by irate passengers and other passengers wanting to get on their flights.…

    • 338 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Airlines and aviation grounded flights in the United States and Canada for a long time after the 9/11 attack due to financial troubles for the airport industry, which became even worse after the attack, and safety for people. Many airlines became bankrupt or were threatened with bankruptcy due to how many people were scared about being in the airports or on planes (Amadeo, 2015).…

    • 662 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    The following essay critiques the performance of management at Qantas during the industrial action of 2012, and the power and conflict issues that arose during the dispute. In particular, the essay focuses on the management style of CEO Alan Joyce, and whether or not Qantas can recover from the crisis with Joyce at the helm.…

    • 3225 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    JetBlue’s most valuable differential advantage above other airlines, their “customers come first” attitude, was severely tarnished. Jet Blue had and was utilizing several different information systems, standardized flight operations and maintenance procedures, an out-sourced reservation system and a system for managing plane and crew. However, their system was not seamless or adequate to handle the onslaught of turbulence on February 14th. In an attempt to identify the problem, a Fish diagram (please refer to the end of synopsis, before reference page) shows that there were many issues with their current information system that were not addressed in the event of a massive scale shutdown.…

    • 1784 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    What the airline failed to anticipate was how the workforce was going to be affected and not just in the number of employees left. The ripple effect was that employees would not feel safe in their jobs, they were no longer committed to the airline. Employees would leave and just like with the employees who were let go, the knowledge and experience were a great loss to the…

    • 834 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    Qantas Report

    • 3495 Words
    • 14 Pages

    Qantas, Australia’s largest domestic and international airline service, has grown immensely since its formation in 1922 and has dominated the Australian domestic aviation industry for years. However, a recent dispute between the unions and management lead to the grounding of all Qantas flights causing the company to suffer both financially as well as in terms of their reputation and reliability for customers.…

    • 3495 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    There is a clear evidence to support the notion that large scale strikes have decline in the UK. Strikes are reported to be at an historical low level. They have gone into decline due to numerous factors. The fall in the level of strike activity can be attributed to lower trade union membership, stable economy, rise of individualism and (HRM) Human Resource Management, restrictive trade union legislations and sectoral shift in employment from manufacturing to service. The latter part has being the most influential on the decline of strike activity in the UK. Employment levels in strike prone industries such as mining, steel and docks have fallen. The changes in structural unemployment means that industries that have represented large scale strike no longer exists. They have been replaced by service industry which is less strike prone. In comparison to other developed western nations such as France and Italy, the UK strike action is of lower magnitude. It would therefore be a misjudgement to portray UK as a strike prone country. This is partly because strikes have merely being concentrated in the primary sector of the economy.…

    • 2176 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Qantas Globalisation

    • 620 Words
    • 3 Pages

    - While the decision to ground Qantas airplanes was a costly and brand damaging move, they were ultimatley left with no choice. It is important for a compant to be able to manage itself. “Effectively they are trying to dictate how we run Qantas – whether it is the pilots’ union demanding the right to dictate pilot pay rates in Jetstar, or the licensed engineers demanding a veto on the modernisation of work practices, or the TWU wanting to limit our use of contractors.” (Freebrain 2011)…

    • 620 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Excellent safety record – probably the best in the world (not one death on a Qantas flight)…

    • 813 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Qantas Dispute

    • 3963 Words
    • 16 Pages

    (1991) stated that "the most visible effect of the strike on the employer is the loss of production, loss of output, inability to meet customer 's demand, inability to supply custom orders on schedule, loss of profits, and many others." Paarsch (1990) suggested that"during the dispute, the company has to maintain production at close to its previous level by redeploying staff, hiring casual or contract labour, and/or increasing the overtime of employees not directly involved in the dispute. As such changes will increase the company 's operating costs, through for example, overtime pay, hiring costs and administrative costs, there will be a decline in profit share for a given level of production…Alternatively, the company is not able to continue to supply output during the dispute and in response may run down inventories to meet its obligations" In the case of Qantas, strikes and refusals to work overtime led to reduced and altered flight schedules affecting Qantas ' performance. (Sheehan, 2011) Prior to the lock-out, the airline had to redeploy its employees and hired casual staff to replace the employees involved in the dispute. Series of strikes and service disruptions culminated in industrial action from the unions caused Qantas decided to lock out all employees involved in the dispute and ground its entire fleet in October, 2011. (Minister for Infrastructure and Transport, 2011) The fleet cost Qantas $68 million in net…

    • 3963 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    American Airlines

    • 1392 Words
    • 4 Pages

    1- Issues The main issue of this case is the lack of profits of the airline industry, an industry that should be more than profitable due to the large amount of customers, the necessity of using airlines' services and the high prices charged by most of these airlines. What we are going to deal with is, why is this happening? And how is American airlines dealing with this problem?. To be able to discuss how American airlines wants to regain profitability, we must identify and analyse different issues such as, the company's background, the airline industry as a whole, the demand for air travel, the marketing strategies, the distribution systems, pricing policies etc.…

    • 1392 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Over the many decades, this industry has existed; several airlines have declared bankruptcy and struggled to stay alive once on the other end of the bankruptcy. Very few of these chapter 11 filing airlines have truly endured the hard times and succeeded. This industry is facing a financial predicament and the future for the airline industry does not look good. The predicament that these industry faces that were accelerated by external shocks. According to Wilson (2005) the war in Iraq, the terrorist attacks on 9/11, the outbreak of Stars, and the crash of the stock market bubble of the millennium is some of the causes of the financial crisis that the U. S. airlines are facing, which has led to a $32 billion loss for the industry.…

    • 2884 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Labor Strike

    • 465 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The labor strike in which I chose was the textile workers strike. The textile strike happen in 1934 which then was in U.S. history the largest labor strike. The strike involved half of million strikers. Textile workers came from New England, the Mid-Atlantic states, and the U.S. Southern states. The strike present o for twenty-two days. They strike twenty-two days about issues were deplorable working conditions, low wages, and lack of union recognition. However, The United Textile Workers (UTW), which had 15,000 members in February 1933, grew to 250,000 members by June of 1934, about half cotton mill workers. Many of those workers were strikers, due to so many textile workers the governors of the time call the National Guards against the strikers. Many textile workers were shot and killed, some shot in the back fleeing for their lives. As I research “The U.S. textile industry had begun to suffer in 1929. Wages fell, and to reduce costs, mill managers implemented a "stretch-out," increasing individual workers' responsibilities while banning restroom trips and other breaks.” -(North Carolina and the New Deal (Raleigh, 1981) ). The inside of North Carolina and the New Deal (Raleigh, 1981) say “During September 1934, 65,000 North Carolina textile workers stayed home, shutting down the state's textile industry. The center of the strike in North Carolina was Gastonia, where on Labor Day thousands of textile workers held a downtown parade.” - (North Carolina and the New Deal (Raleigh, 1981) ).The strike commenced with exultation, but as September drew on, the celebratory tone of the strike cooled. Heeding the advice of textile manufacturers, North Carolina Governor John C.B. Ehringhaus mustered the National Guard to protect the mills from rowdy strikers. I learn last year from social studies that “A mediation panel appointed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt concluded that the grievances of textile workers called for further…

    • 465 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    NOW YOU SEE IT, NOW YOU DON'T: The case of Jet Airways and its Accounting Policies…

    • 1103 Words
    • 15 Pages
    Powerful Essays