No. The I don't believe chart actually did not show that when we looked into it more deeply. I was a set of cherry-picked examples, and even then did not really show what it was claimed to show. Also, there is a HUGE difference between the heads and lower level employees in both arenas.thegreekdog wrote:Are you sure that government employees make less than similarly situated private employees? Wasn't there a big chart posted a couple months ago on this (that showed government employees make more money)? And didn't you, in that thread, indicate that this was because (to paraphrase) corporations were evil?PLAYER57832 wrote:This part is not correct, or rather, it is only correct because those getting non-work government pay make so much less. Even those employed by the government most often make less than those in private industry with similar education and experience requirements.GabonX wrote: The trend is not sustainable, says University of Michigan economist Donald Grimes. Reason: The federal government depends on private wages to generate income taxes to pay for its ever-more-expensive programs. Government-generated income is taxed at lower rates or not at all, he says.
Just as an example, the government heads of the BP operation make less than many of the workers on that rig.
This trend is disturbing, but hardly surprising, given the Baby boom generation is maturing and the down economy.
Lowest level private sector employees often do make less than similarly qualified government employees. But, there is a lot of inconsistancy both within the government and private sector in that. I, for example, worked a position that supposedly only required a year or two of college, but which in fact required a bachelors and which more often would have been filled by someone with a Masters (and to clarify, in Biology a Master's degree is what you are required to get prior to getting a doctorate, it is NOT a fallback for those who fail to get their PhD, as it is in some other fields). I made about 2/3 what the secretary made, a position that only required a high school diploma. Also, she automatically got benefits. I only got them because I had been in a special program. IN private sector, a janitor, who has to deal with human waste, is often required to take a hepatitis shot (should, anyway -- gloves help, but things happen), hazardous chemicals, etc.. will often make less than a floor laborer in a factory. A nurse makes less than a welder, in many cases. Etc.
However, once you move up in ranks, the balance shifts and in extreme ways. CEOS and bankers commonly make several hundred thousand, often millions. No federal employee makes millions, either in bonuses or salary.


