How much your monthly salary/earning?
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How much your monthly salary/earning?
ok guys this could be a disturbing question/not;
how much your monthly salary/earning(in USD)?
you can also add your job type and your location
Well, /me as a fresh graduate from college,
on trainee in Welding Engineering/QC in Engineering Procurement Construction service got about $300 a month, but they add meal,transport&housing,etc here.
I hope I'll have a cheaper hobby like jogging than PC hardware&silencing...now
how much your monthly salary/earning(in USD)?
you can also add your job type and your location
Well, /me as a fresh graduate from college,
on trainee in Welding Engineering/QC in Engineering Procurement Construction service got about $300 a month, but they add meal,transport&housing,etc here.
I hope I'll have a cheaper hobby like jogging than PC hardware&silencing...now
I'm a engineering co-op student at one of better Canadian universities; working for a software company doing mostly QA. Transportation is not necessary, housing is just over $400/month, food... I don't eat much
Four-month co-op term, most of the money is going to next term's tuition...
Four-month co-op term, most of the money is going to next term's tuition...
Last edited by qviri on Sun Jan 01, 2006 9:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Currency calculator for those that doesn't live in USA. Thoguth it might be usefull
http://www.x-rates.com/calculator.html
EDIT: Spell-error
http://www.x-rates.com/calculator.html
EDIT: Spell-error
Last edited by McBanjo on Fri Dec 30, 2005 7:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
US Air Force, SrA. E-4 Paygrade
$3100/month before taxes
$2300/month after taxes
that includes full medical/optical/dental/400k life insurance/40k GI Bill for collage/and a retirement package
not bad imo, although i could probably get triple that in the computer networking field outside the military. but i got a cushy job, i just sit on my ass all day most of the time, so i dont complain.
$3100/month before taxes
$2300/month after taxes
that includes full medical/optical/dental/400k life insurance/40k GI Bill for collage/and a retirement package
not bad imo, although i could probably get triple that in the computer networking field outside the military. but i got a cushy job, i just sit on my ass all day most of the time, so i dont complain.
Probably some sort of cultural/social difference I guess? One of the chief principles that you learn in the USA is that competition is good and that you should always be trying to maximize your reward for any given work output. Probably one of the most useful websites for the USA to see if you're fairly compensated is http://www.salary.com.Aleksi wrote:Don't know about other european countries, but many finnish people find it very uncomfortable to talk about their salaries. I've always understood that is a bit different in north America?
I did vote in the poll, but don't feel comfortable specifying which one it was.
Most everyone knows what their specific field and position is supposed to pay, but anyone who's looking to switch industries or see if some totally different line of work is worth it can go to that website and check things out. It's also (supposed to be) specific to each metro area's average salary data, so you could see if some given amount is fair for a job in a different part of the country even.
Most folks love information. The more information they can get, the more they feel like an informed consumer, or in the case of salaries, an informed producer!
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Yeah, well it's not like every North American is running around bragging about what they're being paid, but I know a ton of folks who just don't care about keeping that sort of thing private. Maybe it's the blogging culture of the internet age? Plenty of people are open to the idea of living their life in full public view, I think.
As for taxes, I guess it would take a lot of work to calculate that stuff out. Your base taxes in the USA are pretty low, but depending on what you do, there's still so many other layers of taxation. You have federal, state, and sometimes local income taxes, vehicle taxes, property taxes, sales taxes, and about a million specialty taxes. I wouldn't be surprised if half the money I earn goes to taxes when you add up all the different taxes and not just the two biggest income taxes.
Obviously folks in the EU can still afford housing, cars, computers, vacations, and so on, so I'm sure there can't be some huge disparity in real buying power when the dust is settled.
As for taxes, I guess it would take a lot of work to calculate that stuff out. Your base taxes in the USA are pretty low, but depending on what you do, there's still so many other layers of taxation. You have federal, state, and sometimes local income taxes, vehicle taxes, property taxes, sales taxes, and about a million specialty taxes. I wouldn't be surprised if half the money I earn goes to taxes when you add up all the different taxes and not just the two biggest income taxes.
Obviously folks in the EU can still afford housing, cars, computers, vacations, and so on, so I'm sure there can't be some huge disparity in real buying power when the dust is settled.
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Yup - that is the illusion that is hard to resolve. Often when travelling stuff looks "wow cheap" or "wow expensive". Until you get the whole lot in context it is meaningless: when I first travelled to Yugoslavia (i.e. the days before it split up)AZBrandon wrote:... so I'm sure there can't be some huge disparity in real buying power when the dust is settled.
1) All salaries were published on the notice board (as it was a co-operative)
2) Engineers were on about $150/month at a time when I was over $2000/month!
Then again their rental, heating, education, heathcare were free. Tobacco was about $2/Kg, Cherry Brandy about 50c/litre etc. On the Sarajevo (Winter Olympic) ski slopes their chalet rental was about $10/week, ski passes about $5/week. If I had to pay for those at non-co-operative member rates they would have been the same as Austria or France.
Hi all, I have a decent enough job providing IT support within a company. I cover many small sites, about 2.5 hours drive across to which end I have a company car where they pay for everything, even fuel for "reasonable" personal mileage! I pretty happy with it, although the taxman likes me too, I get extra tax because of the car ~£100/month. Still a very sweet deal for a new (Sept 05) car. With the extra car tax, student loan repayment, etc about 1/3 of my income goes in taxes!
Seb
Seb
I'm part-time lifeguard at the swimming pool over here.
Salary is around 700€ (800$ ?).
I've got a university degree in Physical Education (or Movement Sciences as they call it now) and I'm doing some more studies as a dietician. That job is about the most I can handle doing the combination of studies, job and triathlon.
Salary is around 700€ (800$ ?).
I've got a university degree in Physical Education (or Movement Sciences as they call it now) and I'm doing some more studies as a dietician. That job is about the most I can handle doing the combination of studies, job and triathlon.
You need to say whether we should count income before or after tax. Does it also include overtime? I get a third of my pay from overtime payments! Depending on whether you count the overtime and/or the tax I could be in any of the top 3 categories - so I haven't voted. Can't complain about the salary though...
Same in the USA. Discussing salaries at work is especially forbidden at most companies, since that is considered to be confidential information.PositiveSpin wrote:In Australia it's usually regarded as impolite to discuss salary with anyone but quite close friends. There are exceptions, though.
Of course, I am talking about professional level jobs, not people who are college and work part time or others making an hourly wage.
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More or less. Then again, some people are probably more comfortable discussing it with strangers on the internet than close friends, 'cuz who cares what some random Aussies know? :pSame in the USA. Discussing salaries at work is especially forbidden at most companies, since that is considered to be confidential information.
If you think about it, the fact that this kind of tight-lipped bullshit is backed by many corporate policies proves that it's not good for us to be so secretive. It's no harm to me whether I tell everyone or noone that I make $x,xxx per fortnight, but if my peers are kept in the dark due to archaic and/or manipulative social mores, it changes the marketplace. Like everything in economics, it's a battle of information -- obviously the company knows what it's paying each employee, so maintaining the imbalance of information is to their advantage, no doubt moving the equilibrium price of labor in their favor.
Yeah I have to admit this is a seemingly strang topic to bring up if you live in the USA, unless of course, you are in a forum (no, not internet forum) that is meant to discuss this explicitly.
Should it be this way? Probably not, but I'm presuming that companies believe it prevents problems from occurring.
Nucor Steel used to have an open-book policy, where everybody could see everybody else's earnings. This changed some time ago though.
Should it be this way? Probably not, but I'm presuming that companies believe it prevents problems from occurring.
Nucor Steel used to have an open-book policy, where everybody could see everybody else's earnings. This changed some time ago though.
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You may think there is no harm for co-workers to know what everyone else is paid, but experience proves differently. It is virtually impossible for everyone in a company to be paid what they are actually worth. It is equally impossible for everyone to agree what everyone else is worth. So when this information is public knowledge then there is a natural human tendency to violate the 10th commandment and covet thy neighbors house.Richard Berg wrote:If you think about it, the fact that this kind of tight-lipped bullshit is backed by many corporate policies proves that it's not good for us to be so secretive. It's no harm to me whether I tell everyone or noone that I make $x,xxx per fortnight, but if my peers are kept in the dark due to archaic and/or manipulative social mores, it changes the marketplace. Like everything in economics, it's a battle of information -- obviously the company knows what it's paying each employee, so maintaining the imbalance of information is to their advantage, no doubt moving the equilibrium price of labor in their favor.