For average US location, not too cheap not too expensive:Originally posted by: Siddhartha
There has been a constant theme on this forum. that other people, union workers, large company CEOs, movie stars, etc earn too much money
My questions is how much do you think people should earn?
Please give the yearly income range, low to high, that you think the following professions should earn:
Originally posted by: Siddhartha
There has been a constant theme on this forum. that other people, union workers, large company CEOs, movie stars, etc earn too much money
My questions is how much do you think people should earn?
Please give the yearly income range, low to high, that you think the following professions should earn:
Civil servant (police and fire men):
K-12 teacher
CEO of a sucessful company
US autoworker
US congressman
Domestic worker
you (provide your profession)
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Civil servant (police and fire men) - $0 (they should volunteer)
K-12 teacher - $0 (they should volunteer)
CEO of a sucessful company - Whatever the market is willing to pay them
US autoworker- Whatever the market is willing to pay them
US congressman - (-$100,000) (that's negative $100,000) a year. If they tax us, we should tax them.
Domestic worker - Whatever the market is willing to pay them
and
you (provide your profession) - Whatever the market is willing to pay me
Originally posted by: Siddhartha
US congressman: 1,000,000 a year. These people are running our country. We want the best people we can get to do it. Also getting paid a decent wage will fight corruption.
Originally posted by: jrenz
Originally posted by: ntdz
Civil servant (police and fire men) - $45,000, $35,000, respectively
K-12 teacher - $50,000
CEO of a sucessful company - $1,000,000 (If it's a Fortune 500 type company)
US autoworker - $30,000
US congressman - $80,000
Domestic worker - $50,000
That salary for a civil servant (police/fire) is ridiculously low. Why should somebody who risks their life on a regular basis, day in and day out, almost every day of the year, be paid more than a grade school teacher, who resides in a classroom 9 months out of the year (And gets 3 months vacation, give or take)? Not belittling teachers, but you see my point.
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: jrenz
Originally posted by: ntdz
Civil servant (police and fire men) - $45,000, $35,000, respectively
K-12 teacher - $50,000
CEO of a sucessful company - $1,000,000 (If it's a Fortune 500 type company)
US autoworker - $30,000
US congressman - $80,000
Domestic worker - $50,000
That salary for a civil servant (police/fire) is ridiculously low. Why should somebody who risks their life on a regular basis, day in and day out, almost every day of the year, be paid more than a grade school teacher, who resides in a classroom 9 months out of the year (And gets 3 months vacation, give or take)? Not belittling teachers, but you see my point.
You're right, but fireman usually only work like 3-4 days a week and require no college degree. Policemen don't always have a 4 year degree either. If you want to talk about risking your life, let's talk about people in the military, in particular the ones doing the actual "fighting." There is significantly more risk being in Iraq than being a policeman. Being a police officer isn't really THAT dangerous unless you're in a bad area such as Detroit or parts of LA.
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: jrenz
Originally posted by: ntdz
Civil servant (police and fire men) - $45,000, $35,000, respectively
K-12 teacher - $50,000
CEO of a sucessful company - $1,000,000 (If it's a Fortune 500 type company)
US autoworker - $30,000
US congressman - $80,000
Domestic worker - $50,000
That salary for a civil servant (police/fire) is ridiculously low. Why should somebody who risks their life on a regular basis, day in and day out, almost every day of the year, be paid more than a grade school teacher, who resides in a classroom 9 months out of the year (And gets 3 months vacation, give or take)? Not belittling teachers, but you see my point.
You're right, but fireman usually only work like 3-4 days a week and require no college degree. Policemen don't always have a 4 year degree either. If you want to talk about risking your life, let's talk about people in the military, in particular the ones doing the actual "fighting." There is significantly more risk being in Iraq than being a policeman. Being a police officer isn't really THAT dangerous unless you're in a bad area such as Detroit or parts of LA.
Originally posted by: DeathBUA
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: jrenz
Originally posted by: ntdz
Civil servant (police and fire men) - $45,000, $35,000, respectively
K-12 teacher - $50,000
CEO of a sucessful company - $1,000,000 (If it's a Fortune 500 type company)
US autoworker - $30,000
US congressman - $80,000
Domestic worker - $50,000
That salary for a civil servant (police/fire) is ridiculously low. Why should somebody who risks their life on a regular basis, day in and day out, almost every day of the year, be paid more than a grade school teacher, who resides in a classroom 9 months out of the year (And gets 3 months vacation, give or take)? Not belittling teachers, but you see my point.
You're right, but fireman usually only work like 3-4 days a week and require no college degree. Policemen don't always have a 4 year degree either. If you want to talk about risking your life, let's talk about people in the military, in particular the ones doing the actual "fighting." There is significantly more risk being in Iraq than being a policeman. Being a police officer isn't really THAT dangerous unless you're in a bad area such as Detroit or parts of LA.
Even in Detroit it's not as dangerous as you'd think...and I work in Detroit and know plenty of Detroit officers.
But I do think teachers and police/firefighter should get somewhere between 60-100K a year.
Personally congressman should be paid hourly and should but paid based on showing up for votes and what not.
For myself...I start as an ER nurse....probably will start at around $24/hr with guaranteed overtime each week. Should make between about 52-64K because of that. Pay should max somewhere around 90K maybe a little more. Depends on what I do with my bachelors degree and if I go back for more schooling.
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: DeathBUA
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: jrenz
Originally posted by: ntdz
Civil servant (police and fire men) - $45,000, $35,000, respectively
K-12 teacher - $50,000
CEO of a sucessful company - $1,000,000 (If it's a Fortune 500 type company)
US autoworker - $30,000
US congressman - $80,000
Domestic worker - $50,000
That salary for a civil servant (police/fire) is ridiculously low. Why should somebody who risks their life on a regular basis, day in and day out, almost every day of the year, be paid more than a grade school teacher, who resides in a classroom 9 months out of the year (And gets 3 months vacation, give or take)? Not belittling teachers, but you see my point.
You're right, but fireman usually only work like 3-4 days a week and require no college degree. Policemen don't always have a 4 year degree either. If you want to talk about risking your life, let's talk about people in the military, in particular the ones doing the actual "fighting." There is significantly more risk being in Iraq than being a policeman. Being a police officer isn't really THAT dangerous unless you're in a bad area such as Detroit or parts of LA.
Even in Detroit it's not as dangerous as you'd think...and I work in Detroit and know plenty of Detroit officers.
But I do think teachers and police/firefighter should get somewhere between 60-100K a year.
Personally congressman should be paid hourly and should but paid based on showing up for votes and what not.
For myself...I start as an ER nurse....probably will start at around $24/hr with guaranteed overtime each week. Should make between about 52-64K because of that. Pay should max somewhere around 90K maybe a little more. Depends on what I do with my bachelors degree and if I go back for more schooling.
That's all you make!? We have a huge nursing shortage here in California, there are plenty of nurses pulling $100k/year here.
Originally posted by: Lothar
Originally posted by: Dissipate
Civil servant (police and fire men) - $0 (they should volunteer)
K-12 teacher - $0 (they should volunteer)
CEO of a sucessful company - Whatever the market is willing to pay them
US autoworker- Whatever the market is willing to pay them
US congressman - (-$100,000) (that's negative $100,000) a year. If they tax us, we should tax them.
Domestic worker - Whatever the market is willing to pay them
and
you (provide your profession) - Whatever the market is willing to pay me
So we shouldn't pay teachers, and police officers?
I'm guessing you also think we shouldn't pay anyone in the military as well?
Originally posted by: Lothar
Originally posted by: Siddhartha
US congressman: 1,000,000 a year. These people are running our country. We want the best people we can get to do it. Also getting paid a decent wage will fight corruption.
$1,000,000 for a congressman?
You're the odd one out in this thread, Bob.
Originally posted by: ntdz
Civil servant (police and fire men) - $45,000, $35,000, respectively
K-12 teacher - $50,000
CEO of a sucessful company - $1,000,000 (If it's a Fortune 500 type company)
US autoworker - $30,000
US congressman - $80,000
Domestic worker - $50,000