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by AnthonyMouse
3378 days ago
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There are plenty of $80K developer jobs in cities with a $20K lower cost of living. If there were actually enough jobs in Texas and Tennessee for everyone in San Francisco to live there with lower expenses but the same salary, explain why most of those people don't do that. Note that things like "cost of finding a new job if you lose yours" are components of cost of living. |
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The real question here is not whether developers can get the exact same salary working somewhere other than SF/SV. For one thing, the story wasn't just about our industry. The original story posited three possible causes for between-firm inequality. Before we obsess over the winner-take-all factor and how it relates to being or not being in the Center Of The Universe (ha), we need to consider how those other two factors play out across the entire economy.
Even among tech companies, subject to the exact same cost-of-living issues, there are significant differences in pay scales. Believe me, I know, because I'm taking advantage of that right now as I transition between jobs. The richer companies are very successfully capturing a disproportionate share of the high-end labor market, either by direct hiring or by acquisition. That enables them to compound their original advantage, in a feedback loop that IMO must be attenuated unless we want to live in a true monoculture. The idea that developers must move to high-cost areas is crap, but the problem of developers going to work (often remotely) for the richest companies is very real.