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Singapore International Airlines - Moving to a Flexi-Wage System during Volatile Times
From 2001 to 2003, Singapore International Airlines (SIA) faced triple disasters: the 9/11 terrorist attacks, SARS epidemic and the Iraq war, which forced it to reduce capacity, reform and restructure its wages. Having managed costs like a tight ship, SIA found it difficult to negotiate wage restructuring and retrenchments with its unions. Operating in a rigid regulatory and business environment, the SIA management found it challenging to tweak the seniority-based wage system, and migrate to a more flexible and competitive compensation structure. With lower yield, high-cost branding and intense competition from the full-service global and low-cost carriers, the SIA management explored ways to balance its strategic elements, attain flexibility and sustain wage and cost competitiveness to earn double-digit returns for its shareholders.