Anonymous wrote:It depends on your profession and skillset. I was working in international development and for that, working for a USG agency is usually better than being on the contractor side in terms of influence, hours, and pay.
But I have a transferable skill set and good degrees, so when I decided to leave the field, I went private and got a 50% pay increase, kept the good hours, and got a major improvement in my day-to-day morale as the work culture is just so much healthier in a thriving corporate environment than in government.
As a fed I do more of the analysis and reporting that I love. Hours are long quarter and fiscal year-end but I'm used to that, it's having my life back as a whole that was most important to me instead of living/breating "my job" 24/7/365.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it depends. I came into the govt as a high up 15 and it is so much different than private sector in all the bad ways. Outdated technology, layers upon layers of approvals, hard to get anything done and often i feel like there is some absurd rule for everything.
This. It might be a good move financially (because of the stability and pension). But you might also lose your mind.
Financially? I thought govt pay was lower for professionals. What field is OP in?
In some fields it can be equal financially but for most- it caps out much lower than private sector.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it depends. I came into the govt as a high up 15 and it is so much different than private sector in all the bad ways. Outdated technology, layers upon layers of approvals, hard to get anything done and often i feel like there is some absurd rule for everything.
This. It might be a good move financially (because of the stability and pension). But you might also lose your mind.
Financially? I thought govt pay was lower for professionals. What field is OP in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it depends. I came into the govt as a high up 15 and it is so much different than private sector in all the bad ways. Outdated technology, layers upon layers of approvals, hard to get anything done and often i feel like there is some absurd rule for everything.
This. It might be a good move financially (because of the stability and pension). But you might also lose your mind.
Anonymous wrote:I think it depends. I came into the govt as a high up 15 and it is so much different than private sector in all the bad ways. Outdated technology, layers upon layers of approvals, hard to get anything done and often i feel like there is some absurd rule for everything.
Anonymous wrote:What field are you in and how much do you earn, is your work interesting, and how are your hours?
I work in an interesting and relevant field (in the newspaper headlines). I make $145k, and I telework 2-3x per week. I have great sick and vacation, and reasonable hours. I have 5 percent match (almost) on a TSP, public transit benefits, student loan repayment, and a pension. I'd never have as good a set up in the private sector-in my field. My friend is in-house at a Fortune 40 company. She also has great hours, benefits, and telework, and she makes $100k more than me. So it just depends.