Anonymous wrote:
It's like any kind of education. There's basic, on the low end, and elite, on the high end. The middle range is where most people are, both the nannies and the parents.
There are relatively few "elite" nannies available, and just as few, very wealthy parents who can afford them. The elite nannies rarely come on the market, and when they do, they often have their choice of attractive offers. After all, their appreciative employers have been talking them up, for years.
Anonymous wrote:All b/c a law firm charges $400/hour for an attorney doesn't mean that the attorney is bringing home $400/hour. Geez people...are you really that stupid?
There are not "a lot" of nanny jobs that pay $30/hour. There are a lot of nannies who think they are worth that amount and wish they made that amount, but no...
Nannies...please get this through your thick skulls. Your worth (i.e., salary) as a nanny is not based on how much your employer brings home, okay? Just like the price of a good meal, or the services of a hair dresser or landscaper or whatever, doesn't change due to the consumer's income...nor does your salary. If you want to get paid $30/hour, then fine - market yourself for that income. The people who can pay for it and want you for that $$$ will hire you. But if you can't find a job for that amount of $$, don't bitch about employers being "cheap". Trust me, we aren't the ones with the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do realize the AVERAGE salary for a lawyer is $90,000/yr, right? It's not nearly so high as people think, especially given the cost for law school.
$300-400 hourly includes overhead - their secretaries are paid from that, the lights in their offices, the rent on their offices, etc.
Plus everyone acknowledges that the current legal business model is on a path to failure because it is...guess what?..too expensive.
Which city are you in?
Anonymous wrote:You do realize the AVERAGE salary for a lawyer is $90,000/yr, right? It's not nearly so high as people think, especially given the cost for law school.
$300-400 hourly includes overhead - their secretaries are paid from that, the lights in their offices, the rent on their offices, etc.
Plus everyone acknowledges that the current legal business model is on a path to failure because it is...guess what?..too expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where's your source, OP?
For what?
Anonymous wrote:Where's your source, OP?
Anonymous wrote:It's silly to compare a nanny to a law school graduate. Some nannies haven't even finished high school, much less college.
And in the United States, how many law school graduates do you know that cannot speak English fluently? Because there are plenty of nannies that do not speak English fluently (if at all) who are still hired.
It's apples and oranges.