حقوق مهندسی در Engineering salaries western EU , UK , AUS, USA
در این پست حقوق سالیانه قبل از کسر مالیات و بیمه و سایر... درج شده است
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http://www.eevblog.com/forum/jobs/en...eu-uk-aus-usa/
« on: August 10, 2015, 07
00 AM »
I'm often amazed at the salaries one can expect as an EE in countries like USA or AUS while those same jobs pay less in equally expensive or more expensive countries in western Europe.
Europe generally has better pension and health benefits defined by law but the tax laves are quite high.
The base bracket in the Netherlands is 34% income tax, going up to 50% for higher salaries (<100K euro).
In the news there are often reports like "we are running out of engineers" or "Huge shortage of technicians for ..." while the salaries stay the same or even go down because of "crisis" and no indexation of some salaries.
After 5-10 years of experience there is very little grow in salary unless one goes into management positions.
For this comparison it will be based on info on payscale.com for a Electrical engineer. Ex income tax.
-Germany:

-Belgium:

-Netherlands:

-France: ~25 - 35K euro
-UK:
Median is 40K euro

-USA:
From what I have heard 100-120K euro is possible with some experience

-AUS:
68K AUD is 45K euro, from what I have heard 70-100K is possible with some expirience (100k = 67k euro).

Tax wedge by country:
A quick calculation with 40K euro salary ex tax in the netherlands:
29.4% income tax, 11.7K in taxes , 28K left
Are you very lucky and earn 80K euro:
40.5% income tax, 32K in tax, 47.6K left
Of course there are many deductibles but those are to hard to list here.
All in all it seems that it is not that bad after all in western europe. While the US salary is significantly higher I'm not sure of there is "much left" after pension, all the taxes etc...
Germany seems to be the best country to be an EE in. Reasonable wages, good healthcare and pension? Low house prices compared to NL and low costs of ownership for cars and motorcycles. Reasonable infrastructure(NL is better in this).
Still compared to lower end jobs like non university in the technical field the EE jobs don't pay that much more for way more involvement in my opinion. With all these companies that are complaining about shortage of technicians they should really up there side of the bargain and pay more.
The salaries for management and CEO's for medium to large companies is ridiculous compared to the workers.
درآمد مدیران میانی و مدیران ارشد برای کمپانی های متوسط و بزرگ ، به شکل بسیار متفاوتی بالاتر است نسبت به کارگران و "مهندسین" .
What are your experiences and opinions?
در این پست حقوق سالیانه قبل از کسر مالیات و بیمه و سایر... درج شده است
برای خالص درآمد و امکان پس انداز، پست بعدی را هم مطالعه فرمایید
http://www.eevblog.com/forum/jobs/en...eu-uk-aus-usa/
« on: August 10, 2015, 07

I'm often amazed at the salaries one can expect as an EE in countries like USA or AUS while those same jobs pay less in equally expensive or more expensive countries in western Europe.
Europe generally has better pension and health benefits defined by law but the tax laves are quite high.
The base bracket in the Netherlands is 34% income tax, going up to 50% for higher salaries (<100K euro).
In the news there are often reports like "we are running out of engineers" or "Huge shortage of technicians for ..." while the salaries stay the same or even go down because of "crisis" and no indexation of some salaries.
After 5-10 years of experience there is very little grow in salary unless one goes into management positions.
For this comparison it will be based on info on payscale.com for a Electrical engineer. Ex income tax.
-Germany:

-Belgium:

-Netherlands:

-France: ~25 - 35K euro
-UK:
Median is 40K euro

-USA:
From what I have heard 100-120K euro is possible with some experience

-AUS:
68K AUD is 45K euro, from what I have heard 70-100K is possible with some expirience (100k = 67k euro).

Tax wedge by country:
A quick calculation with 40K euro salary ex tax in the netherlands:
29.4% income tax, 11.7K in taxes , 28K left
Are you very lucky and earn 80K euro:
40.5% income tax, 32K in tax, 47.6K left
Of course there are many deductibles but those are to hard to list here.
All in all it seems that it is not that bad after all in western europe. While the US salary is significantly higher I'm not sure of there is "much left" after pension, all the taxes etc...
Germany seems to be the best country to be an EE in. Reasonable wages, good healthcare and pension? Low house prices compared to NL and low costs of ownership for cars and motorcycles. Reasonable infrastructure(NL is better in this).
Still compared to lower end jobs like non university in the technical field the EE jobs don't pay that much more for way more involvement in my opinion. With all these companies that are complaining about shortage of technicians they should really up there side of the bargain and pay more.
The salaries for management and CEO's for medium to large companies is ridiculous compared to the workers.
درآمد مدیران میانی و مدیران ارشد برای کمپانی های متوسط و بزرگ ، به شکل بسیار متفاوتی بالاتر است نسبت به کارگران و "مهندسین" .
What are your experiences and opinions?
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