Worldwide, management are merrily trying to lower the status (and so pay) of pilots. The advent of cadets, and paying for an airline seat, is really just the thin edge of the wedge. This goes along with a belief that less qualified pilots are all that is needed in today's, more or less, crash proof jets. This is pushed quite hard by Airbus as a selling point. The reality is that modern jets are every bit as easy to crash as were the older ones. When the automatics fail, which they do quite readily in the Airbus, the aircraft are actually quite a bit more difficult to operate than the old stuff. Plus, because the automatics are almost always engaged (manual flying is actually banned by some airlines), the pilots won't even have recent practice to fall back on. Eventually the lowering of standards will come back to bite, most likely with an increase in worldwide accidents. But, the management will have taken their bonus and nicked off by then, so why would they care.It is not a job that can be done by anyone. The air force used to take 1 percent of applicants, and then fail half of them. Cadet schemes that boast a 95% pass rate, are really boasting about their mediocre standards.