Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because wages should be tied to the work and not the location.
Federal government wages, both domestic and international, are tied to the location's cost of living. (For foreign service overseas posts, hardship and danger are additional factors.)
GS salaries by location: https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries-wages/2022/general-schedule/
Overseas COLA calculator: https://aoprals.state.gov/Web920/cola.asp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm generally in the camp of you should pay people for the job that they are doing, particularly if everyone has the option to work remotely. I do think perhaps it's worth giving a premium to people who come into the office, if coming into the office is something that is valuable to the company. However, if two different people are remote, I'm not sure why salaries would be different.
All that being said, one nuance to consider here is on how locality pay is determined.
1) Some companies adjust pay based on cost of living. In other words, they look at a price index based on a basket of goods. This is typically what people think about when they think of locality pay. This is, for example, how the federal government does locality pay.
2) Some companies adjust pay based on prevailing wages in an area. In other words, they look at the average pay of engineers or financial analysts or lawyers in a region. Then, they adjust pay based on this metric. This is more controversial and it can lead to lower wages than might be expected despite a person living in a high cost of living area.
I can see both sides of this issue overall, but I disagree with the idea of paying a premium to people just because they go to the office. Are they more productive or doing more technical work or better work, which justifies higher pay, or are they just willing to put in face time?
Anonymous wrote:I'm generally in the camp of you should pay people for the job that they are doing, particularly if everyone has the option to work remotely. I do think perhaps it's worth giving a premium to people who come into the office, if coming into the office is something that is valuable to the company. However, if two different people are remote, I'm not sure why salaries would be different.
All that being said, one nuance to consider here is on how locality pay is determined.
1) Some companies adjust pay based on cost of living. In other words, they look at a price index based on a basket of goods. This is typically what people think about when they think of locality pay. This is, for example, how the federal government does locality pay.
2) Some companies adjust pay based on prevailing wages in an area. In other words, they look at the average pay of engineers or financial analysts or lawyers in a region. Then, they adjust pay based on this metric. This is more controversial and it can lead to lower wages than might be expected despite a person living in a high cost of living area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the employee perspective, if Person 1 is making a better Product A than Person 2, shouldn't Person 1 be paid better than Person 2? Even if Person 1 lives in Idaho and Person 2 lives in NYC?
Yes, but I don't think you're making the point.
If both of those people make 50K, and Person 1 is living in Idaho, they are already being compensated higher because they have a higher spending power.
Exactly – as if they were in a different country and were being paid in another, cheaper currency.
If person one is making a better product, they should be paid more than they would if they were making a lesser product. Not necessarily more than a person in another area of the country, especially when having employees in that particular area has benefit to the employer. I imagine employers don’t give you a huge pay increase just for moving to a very expensive city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the employee perspective, if Person 1 is making a better Product A than Person 2, shouldn't Person 1 be paid better than Person 2? Even if Person 1 lives in Idaho and Person 2 lives in NYC?
Yes, but I don't think you're making the point.
If both of those people make 50K, and Person 1 is living in Idaho, they are already being compensated higher because they have a higher spending power.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 There was a hug thread about this in late 2020 (I think) when Facebook announced this approach. Even with adjusting for cost of living differences, it’s not like these big tech companies are paying small company crap wages. Why should Google pay SV wages for the employees that opted to move to Idaho?Anonymous wrote:This is what many companies are doing. Its not an uncommon practice. PreCovid we had many threads about how much of a pay cut was worth a remote position. I took one and it worked well for me for many years! No surprises here
Because wages should be tied to the work and not the location.
You can believe that all you want, but employers disagree.
Anonymous wrote:+1 There was a hug thread about this in late 2020 (I think) when Facebook announced this approach. Even with adjusting for cost of living differences, it’s not like these big tech companies are paying small company crap wages. Why should Google pay SV wages for the employees that opted to move to Idaho?Anonymous wrote:This is what many companies are doing. Its not an uncommon practice. PreCovid we had many threads about how much of a pay cut was worth a remote position. I took one and it worked well for me for many years! No surprises here
Anonymous wrote:From the employee perspective, if Person 1 is making a better Product A than Person 2, shouldn't Person 1 be paid better than Person 2? Even if Person 1 lives in Idaho and Person 2 lives in NYC?
From the employee perspective, if Person 1 is making a better Product A than Person 2, shouldn't Person 1 be paid better than Person 2? Even if Person 1 lives in Idaho and Person 2 lives in NYC?
Anonymous wrote:From the employee perspective, if Person 1 is making a better Product A than Person 2, shouldn't Person 1 be paid better than Person 2? Even if Person 1 lives in Idaho and Person 2 lives in NYC?