|
|
|
|
|
by godelski
2220 days ago
|
|
People are paid by utility, but it isn't the only factor. You don't pay a line cook to be a surgeon. Utility is obviously the dominant factor. > A remote worker in Phoenix doesn't have as many options as a remote worker in NYC when it comes to switching jobs a getting a high salary. So the company pays the NYC dev more since they need to pay more in order to retain that person. So the premise of this is that these people are working remotely... why wouldn't the Phoenix person have the same opportunities to switch jobs as the NYC person if both are able to work remotely? That's kinda rejecting the premise of the scenario. |
|
The Phoenix person and the NYC person don't have the same opportunities because the huge majority of tech jobs still don't support fully remote positions. So the Phoenix person has all the fully remote jobs (many of which adjust salaries down) and all the local Phoenix business. And the NYC person has all the fully remote jobs and the gazillions of local NYC jobs.
Your employer doesn't know that you'd never want to work for a local NYC company or whatever, so they operate under the assumption that they have tighter competition for your labor.
Some day, if lots and lots and lots of remote work is available, this effect will shrink and that will either pull remote salaries closer together or people in LCOL regions will still be willing to accept lower pay and the HCOL people are in trouble.