Originally posted by northernladuk
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Reply to: Job of the Day
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Previously on "Job of the Day"
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Originally posted by kal View PostC'mon only 3 pages?. This is CUK!, at least 10 pages of comments telling me I'm talking complete bollox are required before I will even consider that I possibly, maybe, could be, a little teeny tiny bit... wrong.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostAgree with this. Kal has this one all wrong but won't let it drop even after 3 pages of posts pointing it out.
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Originally posted by vwdan View PostLooks to me like the very first step on the "middle management" ladder - probably about £25k's worth in permie land. I made the switch to contracting and decided it would be worth the risk and switch if I could get £250 per day....
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Originally posted by kal View PostThat's all very well but not anyone who sat at home watching Jeremy Kyle can apply for a role like this, looks like they want an experienced agile team lead working in financials for 190 notes a day. Client is probably paying £250 so the agent is taking a 30% cut (total conjecture on my part but not beyond the realms of feasibility IMO).
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Originally posted by kal View PostThat's all very well but not anyone who sat at home watching Jeremy Kyle can apply for a role like this, looks like they want an experienced agile team lead working in financials for 190 notes a day. Client is probably paying £250 so the agent is taking a 30% cut (total conjecture on my part but not beyond the realms of feasibility IMO).
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Originally posted by vwdan View PostAnd would be like winning the lottery for someone who is on some crap 0 hour minimum wage contract!
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostSo £200 / day outside IR35 puts you in the top 10% (more or less).
Of wages it nudges into top 20% for 7.5 hr day.
Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings, 2013 Provisional Results - ONS
At the other end of the distribution, 10% of full-time employees earned more than £27.02 per hour, which was also an increase of 1.5% compared with the previous year.
UK incomes: how does your salary compare? | Money | theguardian.com
wage or divis etc.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostAbsolutely. To get in the top 10% of earners you need to be on £44k a year. That percentage goes down if you start adjusting out the super earners and bringing in self employed etc that skew the number.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostOddly enough this contract could have paid somewhere around the Duke of Cambridge's £40k a year wage for being an air ambulance pilot. I didn't have a clue what they paid pilots but thought it was more than this.
The Senior pilots at places like BA etc can earn well over 100k.
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Oddly enough this contract could have paid somewhere around the Duke of Cambridge's £40k a year wage for being an air ambulance pilot. I didn't have a clue what they paid pilots but thought it was more than this.
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Originally posted by vwdan View PostNo, just people on here have wildly inaccurate views about the average earnings of average people. Most people, especially those without a professional trade, would consider anything £30k+ to be a good salary. £40k+ is just a dream to the majority of the population.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostTrue. It doesn't mean this contract rate isn't stupid, but you have to laugh at people here who genuinely seem to believe living off £100/day isn't possible.
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