Overpaying remote workers compared to the local market is bad as it create distortion of local markets (on housing especially where local non remote workers cannot afford living where they work).
(I'm a remote worker outside of the US and my personal interest would be to be paid more, but I don't believe it would be the general interest)
This seems like a variation on the fixed pie fallacy. It's absolutely in the general interest for more people to get paid more. How do you expect poorer markets to catch up with richer ones if you believe that it is bad for people in such markets to get paid more? Nonsense.
It's much easier to catch up if you can compete on price to start with. Why would a company take a chance on a developer in a new location if they've got to pay just as much? Once there's a critical mass of employers hiring in my location, competition will raise salaries up to parity, but sharing the surplus is what incentivises that competition in the first place.
I am not competing on price. I compete o quality. In your analogy, I am someone who the company needs to “take a chance”, the company is risking hiring a worse employee because I don’t live in SF or the US. That’s not how I see it.
The pandemic made a lot of people realize they can hire remotely and be fine. Why should I share the surplus with the company? I am a good developer and I will negotiate to get a better pay. Why wouldn’t I?
> Why should I share the surplus with the company?
The whole premise of being employed is that you make more money for the company than they're paying you.
> I am a good developer and I will negotiate to get a better pay. Why wouldn’t I?
So why would you rule out companies that pay location-adjusted salaries? If they're the best offer on the table then you're shooting yourself in the foot.
I rule out precisely because they never were the best offer in the table for me. There are companies that do not pay location-adjusted salaries that pay better. I was able to get a job in those the last two times I switched jobs.
A worse offer is a worse offer, a better offer is a better offer. If Gitlab isn't making competitive offers then of course take a better offer elsewhere, but what matters is the bottom line, not the method they used to come up with it.
Patently untrue. Setting up accounting in a new country may be a huge effort for the company.
The timezone alone may rule out a location.
Culture is closely aligned with location, and every company cares about "cultural fit" (while pledging to support diversity, of course) for better or worse.
Misaligned holidays, internet connection quality, even power supply disruptions... and so many things are directly affected by location.
That's all true but besides the point. Paying a developer less because they have bad Internet connection quality, lack availability or because they incur more administrative costs makes sense. Those are all things that can affect their work performance or cost. Paying a developer based on their cost of living or based on what their neighbors are earning is nonsense.
> Paying a developer based on their cost of living or based on what their neighbors are earning is nonsense.
I agree it "looks" like nonsense... but it's not. It's reality.
Different countries, even neighbouring countries, can have completely different salaries while doing the same thing... and things can cost completely differently too...
Just check the border between the USA and Mexico.
This line of reasoning doesn't consider equity, and the fact that people want to move - especially out of low socioeconomic areas. If you're paid a local wage, there's basically no way you'd ever be able to relocate to somewhere more expensive since selling your house wouldn't put a dent in the price of a home elsewhere.
Gitlab should just offer to cover moving expenses for employees 1 time per X years, then even the poorest-paid person working there would have that freedom (aside from any immigration concerns). I don't think it's in their best financial interests, but would cost maybe 10k at most and whatever the additional salary per year is and garner more support for their "local pay scale" strategy.
Sure, but paying a high wage relative to the local prevailing wage is different than paying the same high wage everywhere. Part of the problem in the Bay Area is that tech companies distorted the local wages so dramatically.
People are going to min-max whatever system you offer. If you don't pay equally and you adjust for cost of living, people are likely going to go for high CoL locations and make you pay the most. If you don't adjust for CoL, you'll likely see your devs leave high CoL areas for lower ones. While you might be "overpaying" them according to their chosen CoL, you're likely underpaying what the high CoL would have demanded.
It seems counter-intuitive but I imagine that not doing CoL adjustments actually lowers total payroll.
> It seems counter-intuitive but I imagine that not doing CoL adjustments actually lowers total payroll.
That's not the problem that forty was talking about. The issue is that when you drop a ton of employees in an area whose wages are well beyond the norm you create larger societal problems.
I don't really think you do. Even poor rural communities have working rich like doctors and lawyers. There are rich rural folk 5 hours from every city. Adding a developer here and there is just a new face of the same working rich, the top 1-2%.
In fact, concentrating developers in one place like SF is pretty clearly the far greater social evil than ~evenly dispersing them around the country and letting them live in states/cities that perhaps desperately need the benefits of highly trained skilled workers who will pay a ton of taxes.
I would say that packing most developers into SF and California is far worse for America than letting educated and productive workers find communities around the country, potentially growing tech industries all over. Likely far better for equity, diversity, tax outcomes, and social good. I really can't see any argument for packing them all in California and letting all the other states rot.
Well the examples I have seen here in France did not work out so well. There were large arrivals of rich, well paid Parisians to cities like Nantes and Bordeaux, and it completely messed the local housing market, forcing many people who were living there to leave the city because they couldn't afford the rent anymore. Of course it creates a lot of resentment and tensions.
To be fair, France and the US are very very different. When we talk about rural areas in the U.S., we're not talking about Bordeaux, one of the most famous and prestigious wine growing regions in the entire world, a literally world famous rural area beloved by the elite of dozens of nations.
We're talking about flyover country. The kind of place that rich Parisians would only ever fly over and would never for any reason consider actually going to.
We're also talking about having so much space that the idea that developers could mess up local housing markets is crazy! In the US, packing developers together ruins housing markets (see the SF housing market ruined by tech companies) and spreading them out across the other 49 states and ~thousand+ rural locations prevents most out-sized effects, except in a few prestigious places known for elite vacations.
> I don't really think you do. Even poor rural communities have working rich like doctors and lawyers. There are rich rural folk 5 hours from every city. Adding a developer here and there is just a new face of the same working rich, the top 1-2%.
Those doctors and lawyers aren't getting paid big city salaries.
Sure, they are primary care providers making $110k or real estate attorneys making $120k, instead of $400k in private practice in a rich area or partner at the big firm making millions.
But most developers aren't making that either. I get that there are some few who are making $400k to millions, but the median developer pay in every software field according to the stack overflow survey is ~80k.
Your average small town doctor is likely out-earning your average developer, so I think it's a good comparison.
(I'm a remote worker outside of the US and my personal interest would be to be paid more, but I don't believe it would be the general interest)