Imagine if someone came up to you and started talking about money: "Hello, good to meet you. What do you do for a living? Oh, that sounds interesting. How much do you make? Do you get a pension? Are you investing in the stock market? You are? Great! What mutual funds and stocks do you own? Wait, you're not diversified? Let me tell you what you need to do!"
A dialogue like that could unlock all sorts of promising insights and opportunities. But at the same time, it sounds almost impossible. We've come to a point where it's generally considered inappropriate or even rude to discuss your income. In an attempt to change that, Redditor u/BigPlunk asked other platform users, "What is your job and how much do you get paid?"
Surprisingly, many of them replied! Gotta love the transparency and honesty of some people.
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I’m a bum and get $120 a week donating plasma, but plot twist I have an interview at the plasma place tomorrow.
Update: I went to the interview, they called and asked to push it back to 3pm which was completely fine as they had gotten their truck in. The interview went well, and I answered the questions as best as I could. They said it would be full time Monday-Friday 1pm-9:30pm and every other weekend 6am-4:30pm starting at $13-14 an hour. I hope to hear back from them in the next few days, as they mentioned getting my ID, Social Security Card, and High School Diploma so they could make copies.
I’m a farmer. My earnings are flirting with the breadline, but I have very little bills and my life is overall very happy and fulfilling
u/BigPlunk came up with the idea for their post through browsing Reddit. "I had been reading in the r/AntiWork subreddit about companies trying to shut down employees who were discussing their wages," they told Bored Panda.
"I was thinking about how secrecy about the money we make only benefits the companies and not the workers. I was thinking about how inflation without wage increases means that workers are actually taking a pay decrease and how discussing wages more openly might lead to more wage increases. I could go on about this topic quite a lot as it is something that has been top of mind for some time now."
NYC roll off dumpster driver under a Teamster union contract. $40 an hour in January + medical and pension paid 100% by my employer. There’s guaranteed overtime too, so gross around $130k + the other perks. We also get a 100k severance payout the day we retire. I have a bachelors in business, but fell in love with being outside all day. I also sell scrap metal if I can collect it and I have a thriving eBay business from other things I find in the dumpsters. Made another 20-25k doing that on the side.
It's ridiculous that some workers don't see the value of unions. Pay a small amount of dues every month. Pay attention to union call to action events and support them as best you can. Get a fantastic wage and competitive benefits. The end result is in your favor.
I do research with brain cells, HIV, cocaine, and fentanyl. $29,500/year aka ~$14/hr. Yes I'm sad that this is what a Master's degree got me.
I work in a leadership role in a commcial department of a SAAS company in Europe and I almost feel ashamed now. My salary is around 3 times that money.....Can't belive this is true.
After going through the comments, u/BigPlunk People thought people were generally quite eager to share how much they made.
"It seems as though many people want more transparency about wages," they said. "Many people were also saying that they wanted more specific information, including which country/state/province people were living and working in and whether they had healthcare/benefits provided. I think that this thread was the start of a larger conversation."
I'm a teacher in Zimbabwe. I make $150 (USD) per month. $150 is not enough. We’re just living day by day.
Officer on a container ship work about 6 months out of the year and make about 120k. For the most part my job is looking out a window at some waves.
The OP agrees that it has been made culturally inappropriate to discuss wages. But mostly because that would largely result in higher wages for all.
"It means there would be no more paying employee A and employee B different amounts to do the same job. Transparency in wages would likely result in issues like racism and ageism and sexism becoming more obvious," they said.
" I have been posting a lot lately on LinkedIn about the need for companies to include salary ranges and detailed compensation packages as part of job postings. Everyone claims 'competitive compensation' in their postings, yet very few are competitive enough to actually throw out a number. I think that many companies that do post a salary range tend to post a very wide range and then hire on the lower side of it."
Entrepreneur, negative 10k per year
Thank you for the honesty. Entrepreneurship is grossly glorified.
Emt 15/hr
Edit: u guys need to realize, I’m on the high end. 15/hr is starting wage here and that’s freaking nuts. I seriously met a guy who worked 20+ years as an advanced EMT over in Tennessee and he was legit making 10.50 an hour. The dude was 48 on, 24 off.
Actually y’all think I’m doing rough? Check out wildland firefighters haha
that is so sad. what does it tell us abot a society when jobs like that are getting salaries like this?
carpenter here, 67$ an hour with including my benefits.
Any bets this is union? (Edited to add, due to comments, okay, fine, it could be any carpenter. )
I am a paraprofessional in an elementary school. I spend most of my time in a self contained Kindergarten - 5th grade classroom of mostly "non verbal" students with autism. (Occasionally I float to other classrooms) I make around 20k a year. I love my job, but the pay is insulting.
This is insultingly low. Especially for the care and attention this requires.
I work at a recycling plant, I get $35 an hour to stand at a conveyer belt picking out glass
Damn. Reading some of these posts of people with really important jobs with very fancy degrees makes me feel drastically overpaid. I’m a dog walker/pet sitter/Gal Friday. $25-$50/hr. I average about 75k a year. Wear yoga pants and t-shirts to work every day, listen to my AirPods and do my Pimsleur while working, leave time in the middle of the day between my appointments for my violin/cello lessons each week, and am usually stoned most of the day. Love my job. No real benefits so paying for those myself eats into my profit margin, but the total lack of stress or any type of management for my line of work totally makes up for it. I honestly don’t feel like I work. It feels like I wake up and f**k around all day for really good money.
UPS package sorter at a warehouse, 22$ an hour plus time and a half pay for anything over 5 hour shift in a single day (so for example one shift is 5 hours if I work two shifts in a row the second one would be 33$ an hour)
Unlimited overtime too so if I really really wanted to I could triple shift everyday for an entire week (that would be like 15 hours straight everyday working though) and get a months worth of money in a single check
I did UPS in college. Good work for part-time employees and decent benefits while in school. Never have to talk to anyone and all you do is put packages either on or off a truck. Small sort is the best though. Small packages and you just organize them by postal code.
i just started a new job as a software engineer with 384k total comp. to be honest i don’t really know what to do with most of my money besides caring for my aging parents and saving. i feel very lucky and privileged to be here.
Underwater Welder. 296k annually.
sounds fair. not only is it dangerous, these guys are making sure that ships or docksides stay in use, so they are preventing outtages that are extremely costly, I suppose....
13 year old here, I take out the trash and take out of the dishwasher at home and get paid 78 dollars a month or 936 dollars a year by my mom.
I’ve never understood this. The 13 year old lives in the household right? So why should they get paid for doing something that benefits them too? Not judging any type of parenting, I’m just curious why, instead of paying them to do unusual chores that don’t necessarily benefit them, like babysitting a sibling or raking leaves, parents pay them to throw out the trash that would stink up the house for the teen too
Licensed Nursing Assistant for a Home Care Agency- $13.50/hr. It’s embarrassingly underpaid, but the girl I take care of is so incredibly sweet (18F with cerebral palsy - nonverbal). Being able to help her and her family out means more to me than my actual paycheck.
Private jet captain. Varies with overtime, but this year will be around $360k.
I work in a steel mill that heats steel bars to a certain hardness. I get paid 18$ an hour and so far we haven’t had anyone die for a year (that’s a record)
Not just injured. Haven’t had anyone DIE for a year. For just $18/hour! 😳
Master of the custodial arts. $17.50/h.
This should be higher pay. I hate custodial work and appreciate anyone who can do it.
Inspect nuclear reactors under contract, ~$100k/yr but only work 10 weeks a year
I’m a line cook / manager for a busy restaurant, and I get paid $19 an hour +tip share + profit share from two recipes of mine on the menu.
Profit share is a nice touch. I don't think many restaurants credit their recipe creators like that.
Artificial intelligence/computer vision. About $230k.
I’m an English teacher in charity organization. 6$/h
How can this be?!? Isn't that below minimum wage even in the US?!?
Vet tech, $15/hr in Utah. Getting a raise later this month tho!
Senior IT analyst, a little under $100k. Not bad for a GED recipient.
Air Traffic Controller. Around $100k
Medical Coder - make $31/hr, about 65k annually.
Exchange rates are meaningless. We need to give these salaries in Big Macs. I'll tell you why. In the example I give above, our president gets around 200k per annum, which is lower than some of the people here doing relatively ordinary jobs. However, that salary here is huge and will buy a huge luxury house, several luxury cars, etc. So it's kinda meaningless unless you compare prices of normal daily items. Hence the Big Mac index. So for example, according to google, a big mac in NY is $5. Here it's ZAR 40 or $2.60. In our biggest city. So the *actual* exchange rate ought to be 7.8 : 1, not 15:1. So on that reckoning, our president's salary's buying power is actually more like $400k per year. To give a contrasting example, a floor cleaner might get about ZAR 2500/month or $166 per month. But if you factor in burgernomics, it's actually closer to $253/month. Still very low. Not giving your location is a bit meaningless.
Exchange rates are meaningless. We need to give these salaries in Big Macs. I'll tell you why. In the example I give above, our president gets around 200k per annum, which is lower than some of the people here doing relatively ordinary jobs. However, that salary here is huge and will buy a huge luxury house, several luxury cars, etc. So it's kinda meaningless unless you compare prices of normal daily items. Hence the Big Mac index. So for example, according to google, a big mac in NY is $5. Here it's ZAR 40 or $2.60. In our biggest city. So the *actual* exchange rate ought to be 7.8 : 1, not 15:1. So on that reckoning, our president's salary's buying power is actually more like $400k per year. To give a contrasting example, a floor cleaner might get about ZAR 2500/month or $166 per month. But if you factor in burgernomics, it's actually closer to $253/month. Still very low. Not giving your location is a bit meaningless.