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Peer comparison: Anonymous salary poll


Octavian

Peer comparison: Anonymous salary/ monthly income poll  

416 members have voted

  1. 1. What is your gross (i.e. before deductions income) per month

    • 0 - R10 000
      27
    • R10 001 - R20 000
      50
    • R20 001 - R30 000
      69
    • R30 001 - R40 000
      63
    • R40 001 - R50 000
      59
    • R50 001 - R60 000
      35
    • R60 001 - R70 000
      27
    • R70 001 - R80 000
      21
    • R80 001 - R90 000
      15
    • R90 001 - R100 000
      8
    • Above R100 000
      40


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See the poll is showing a non-normal distribution, with outliers in the plus R100 000 bracket. Possibly an indication of corrupted (i.e. We have liars amongst us) data.

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Gross income is no indicator of spare cash to spend on bikes. That is better answered by the questions:

 

1. Are you married?

2. Do you have kids?

 

If the answer to 1 and 2 is yes, the answer is 'Shem.'

 

In that case you should go for household income I think .

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Gross income is no indicator of spare cash to spend on bikes. That is better answered by the questions:

 

1. Are you married?

2. Do you have kids?

 

If the answer to 1 and 2 is yes, the answer is 'Shem.'

 

100%. Kids more than marriage. Marriage = dual income. Kids = high expenditure. Between government and kids, the best lube would be any lube please.

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Gross income is no indicator of spare cash to spend on bikes. That is better answered by the questions:

 

1. Are you married?

2. Do you have kids?

 

If the answer to 1 and 2 is yes, the answer is 'Shem.'

 

Wanted to set it up like that, but some guys might get confused.

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In that case you should go for household income I think .

 

Nope. Not unless your wife points her discretionary income at buying bikes. That doesn't happen for me...

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A better comparison would have been disposable income. I may earn R50k/month but have R2k left and be worse off than a R30k/months who has R5k left. He's riding a Cannondale and I'm on a Silverback...

 

I wanted to go for that, but then the poll would be influenced by peoples own individual cicumstances. This is more about income earning ability.

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A better comparison would have been disposable income. I may earn R50k/month but have R2k left and be worse off than a R30k/months who has R5k left. He's riding a Cannondale and I'm on a Silverback...

 

There is no option for negative values... :unsure:

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Doesn't matter what I earn....first the government takes it's share....the rest goes to the wife..... :-(

 

I know the feeling, managed to negotiate a monthly pocket money amount for bike stuff

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Gross income is no indicator of spare cash to spend on bikes. That is better answered by the questions:

 

1. Are you married?

2. Do you have kids?

 

If the answer to 1 and 2 is yes, the answer is 'Shem.'

 

3. Does your wife work?

 

Shem Shem

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