Cathay Pacific’s ‘great resignation’ rolls on as Hong Kong’s strict Covid-19 restrictions take a mental toll on pilots
- Tightened rules for aircrew pile on to pressures many were already struggling with through pandemic
- Airline recruiting more local pilots, a move some say will help it save on hiring costly expatriates

A spate of cockpit resignations has affected those still at work. “It feels like we’re flying with a depressed workforce,” the Hong Kong resident said.
Many pilots were on leave for stress, others had resigned or were looking for jobs elsewhere, while some like him were quitting flying for good.
“It’s becoming that desperate,” he said.
A spokesman for Cathay Pacific Airways said the Hong Kong carrier was on a hiring blitz for local pilots, and aside from offering jobs to more than 180 local pilots by February, hoped to recruit hundreds more this year.
He declined to reveal how many had resigned, but said the airline was doing all it could to retain its pilots while hiring available pilots in the city, including those left unemployed by the closure of Cathay Dragon.