"What the market demands"? I thought that was surviving, living through your flight, no crash, not sucked out the door, no PTSD It got overtaken by what the stock market demands - maximum short-term profit.
It may have been overtaken, but it certainly isn't just the stock market. Passengers demand low fares. They choose less reputable airlines to get lower fares, so all the airlines have to at least be competitive on price. And if you look, running an airline is a low margin operation averaged over time. Remember the old joke: How do you make a small fortune in the airline industry? Start with a large one.
Your statement about safety is hyperbole. While safety is important, it is like any other parameter. A trade off. The safest way to fly is to not fly at all, but folks all over the world accept the risk. And what is the risk? Watching the TV news this morning it stated that for the recent Memorial Day holiday 3 million passengers (in the US alone) boarded flights. Now lets guesstimate some. It would seem that if a peak day boards 3 million passengers, average days are probably somewhere around a million. So easily 300 million boardings a year. In the last decade by my recollection there have been about 400 people killed in airline crashes that were due to design flaws, and perhaps a thousand who have been terrified by a window blowing out or a strange maneuver in the sky caused by a design flaw. So when you board an aircraft there is on the order of one chance in ten million of something bad happening due to errors in design and manufacture. This is another example of the wide mismatches that often occur between perceived risk and actual risk.
One in ten million apparently isn't close to good enough for you. What number do you find acceptable? One in a billion? One in a hundred billion? Do you really think that Nichicon capacitors provide reliability numbers in that range? I will readily agree that they are better than many alternatives, but are they really that good?
Quick update. A little googling showed that annual boardings in the US are over 800 million per annum, and worldwide totals are on the order of 4.5 billion.
Boeing is not an airline, they are an aircraft manufacturer. As their costs/prices/greed goes up, that trickles down to all airlines and their customers. It's pretty much a monopoly. Jumping ship to Airbus they have a
backlog of 8,598 aircraft so you'll be waiting a while for new planes. No other choice yet.
When a corporation is badly managed - due to ineptitude, stupidity, greed, corruption - the end result is shoddy product. The big turd rolls out the door. Normally this is perfectly fine, people complain and grumble to no end (myself included) and not much changes.
Until there are injuries or deaths. This is the limit to shoddy that Boeing and the occasional car maker has crossed. We can argue the well known 'why' but consensus is Boeing's emphasis is on returning value to shareholders, executive compensation as priority #1 has another price that isn't directly evident and cannot be prosecuted.
One product I worked on, a malfunction could cause big explosions and I found the electronics design was shit, did not meet safety standards. Digging in, I found they had obtained a fake approvals certificate. So I refused to do any engineering or support on it, have anything to do with it.
The CEO's response? He pulled any claims that it was certified, and the old quote "Over 350 million hours of safe _____ ". Who needs any safety in design, any regulatory when there are no big incidents and this fabulous track record number proves that? It works great".
Let us walk into a casino with the same viewpoint. Are we entitled to win or lose, based on the payout history, the number of clients?
You seem to be saying deaths are acceptable, then forecast how many 737-related we'll see this year that are perfectly acceptable according to statistics of XX million boardings/year.
I'm saying engineers want zero deaths. How terrible to have your heart in your craft. Engineers have all the responsibility and none of the authority, and with finance bros, MBA's running things it's now impossible to do good work, as well as undesirable in terms of short-term profit.
Do you think Boeing Starliner is going to make it back in one piece? I think it's track record is pushing one boarding. Are your safety "trade off" stats OK if the astronauts are killed?