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Ask HN: Are tech salaries high compared to a decade ago?

1 pointsby itsmefazabout 5 years ago
I&#x27;ve always heard this argument that engineers now are earning more than ever before and whatnot..<p>However, I was having this conversation with a senior manager of mine and he revealed the salary he was making he was around my experience. And it is almost similar to what I&#x27;m making now.. (I understand that the sample size is very low, some data around this would be really helpful)<p>How is this argument even right that back then people were earning less, when the correct argument should be that engineering salaries haven&#x27;t increased that much from a decade ago?

4 comments

giantg2about 5 years ago
Don&#x27;t forget to factor in inflation. I have heard what someone was making 25 years ago in a help desk type role. It sounded low, but adjusting for inflation showed they were making just as much as I was as an intermediate developer with more responsibilities. They also had more profit sharing than I do now.<p>I&#x27;ve been at my current job for a little less than a decade. I can say that my pay is pretty similar to when I started if you account for inflation, 1 promotion, and the slight tenure-based increase in profit sharing. Looking at glassdoor&#x27;s salary estimator, I seem to be priced correctly.<p>This suggests that salaries might be roughly the same as a decade ago and that salaries may have gone down in the longer term. These are just anecdotal. I seem to remember the longterm trend was covered in an article. I have also heard that you need to job hop to really increase your compensation.
mdorazioabout 5 years ago
That&#x27;s a complicated question because the answer is both location-dependent and requires a comparative analysis. In places like SF, big tech salaries have grown substantially (along with the cost of living) since 2010, while in other locations they haven&#x27;t grown all that much and in not-big tech the increases haven&#x27;t been that large. For example, a new hire at Google today can expect a comp package of at least $160K, while in 2010 I seem to remember it being around $120K.<p>The bigger issue more broadly is that generally speaking, tech salaries have been growing steadily over the last decade while non-tech salaries have been mostly stagnant, so it often seems like tech workers make a huge amount now when effectively a lot of other people just aren&#x27;t making as much as they should.
ksajabout 5 years ago
That depends. Around Y2K, people in infosec made boatloads of money. It could be argued that we still do, but the money isn&#x27;t anywhere as free-flowing as it was back then.<p>I keep seeing security gigs offering half of what was on offer for the same positions back then. Although I think a lot of it has to do with how much better automated software has become. You don&#x27;t need anywhere near the level of skill that was required during infosec genesis. Now everybody thinks they are experts after they&#x27;ve read a book and downloaded metasploit.
sharemywinabout 5 years ago
probably depends alot on the technology&#x2F;language.