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Smokey Dando
Joined: 19 May 2010 Posts: 19 Location: HONG KONG
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 12:56 am Post subject: |
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Elliot - read between the lines brother. It is enough to survive, but it is not enough to live. What are your qualifications? Are you just a backpacker that wants to survive? A guy who has done a year in Korea and thinks he is a teacher? If you are qualified then it is most certainly not enough.
You must also consider the amount of hours you will have to work to get that pathetic salary. Is it a 6 day week? What about holidays? |
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oxi
Joined: 16 Apr 2007 Posts: 347 Location: elsewhere
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 1:05 am Post subject: |
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Smokey Dando wrote: |
Elliot - read between the lines brother. It is enough to survive, but it is not enough to live. What are your qualifications? Are you just a backpacker that wants to survive? A guy who has done a year in Korea and thinks he is a teacher? If you are qualified then it is most certainly not enough.
You must also consider the amount of hours you will have to work to get that pathetic salary. Is it a 6 day week? What about holidays? |
I think he's just having a laugh. He mentions 12K, gets a barrowload of passionate replies, then when they cool off he ups it to 13 and asks again. Nice one.
Maybe he'll start a new thread asking 'What's it like in HK? I hear the people aren't very nice.' |
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Smokey Dando
Joined: 19 May 2010 Posts: 19 Location: HONG KONG
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 5:49 am Post subject: |
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Yep I think you are right Oxi. Sounds like a wind-up artist to me. Also, if you are getting accommodation as part of your package it is most certainly not free. It is part of your total remuneration. Not to mention it may be shared, small, unlivable or all of the aforementioned.
I think anyone considering a move to HK can not get a realistic idea of salaries unless they compare the package to what others with similar experience and qualifications are making in HK (not Korea, not the Mainland, not anywhere else at all). You may be able to tolerate the NET at your school making more for a little while but eventually it will do your head in.
For example, I work at a vocational college. I'm making about $36K + private accomodation. We had a young guy from the UK doing language activities and the like with us and he was making about $15K with no extras. This salary is probably in line with his experience and qualifications but it did not allow him to live any kind of expatriate lifestyle that many of us take for granted. Hong Kong is a noisy and difficult place to live and work in. In my opinion if you are not being rewarded financially then there is simply no reason to be here. |
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elliot_spencer
Joined: 26 Feb 2007 Posts: 495
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 7:39 am Post subject: |
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Let's just get 1 thing straight, I am not messing about.
I have a degree in TESOL and also a CELTA. I have a job offer with HKD Education and accommodation is free for teachers. My plan is to work with them for a year and then move to a NET or PNET position. I am working in Italy and getting on the scheme from here is difficult.
So, if you still don't believe me provide me with an email addy and I'll gladly forward a copy of my documents to you.
So, seriously, is 13,000HK$ really not enough?? How do the HKers live on that sorta money.. like I said, I have no debts so my salary will be just spending money
Thanks |
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powerrose
Joined: 14 Apr 2003 Posts: 119 Location: Shenzhen, China
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 11:47 am Post subject: |
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Last edited by powerrose on Sun Jun 20, 2010 10:18 am; edited 7 times in total |
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oxi
Joined: 16 Apr 2007 Posts: 347 Location: elsewhere
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 12:07 pm Post subject: |
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So, seriously, is 13,000HK$ really not enough?? |
Ok, so people answered your question at 12K. 13's not going to change it much. You have a variety of answers from yes- easily, to no - impossible. Personally I go for yes - but difficult and not much fun. You're unlikely to get anything more definitive.
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How do the HKers live on that sorta money? |
parent support/staying with family/a lifetime of finding where cheap shopping is/staying out of Central/because they have to... |
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elliot_spencer
Joined: 26 Feb 2007 Posts: 495
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 5:42 pm Post subject: |
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OK. thanks for all your replies. Apart from the NET scheme and the British council, I can see most langauge schools pay around 13,000HK$. If one was to stay working with language schools is this really the salary expectations
Thanks |
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Serious_Fun

Joined: 28 Jun 2005 Posts: 1171 Location: terra incognita
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Posted: Thu Jun 03, 2010 1:06 pm Post subject: |
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Smokey Dando wrote: |
Hong Kong is a noisy and difficult place to live and work in. In my opinion if you are not being rewarded financially then there is simply no reason to be here. |
Well said. |
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cormac
Joined: 04 Nov 2008 Posts: 768 Location: Xi'an (XTU)
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Posted: Sat Jul 31, 2010 11:22 pm Post subject: |
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Just wondering... I have a BA in Business, a Tesol cert, and a Celta. 1 year experience in Kinder, and 13 years working in business, 33 years old. If I avoided Kinder jobs, what sort of income should I be looking for? Assume that I would have to sort my own accommodation. |
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Serious_Fun

Joined: 28 Jun 2005 Posts: 1171 Location: terra incognita
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Posted: Sun Aug 01, 2010 2:00 am Post subject: |
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cormac wrote: |
Just wondering... |
Just wondering... why you didn't use the search function. |
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cormac
Joined: 04 Nov 2008 Posts: 768 Location: Xi'an (XTU)
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Posted: Sun Aug 01, 2010 9:43 am Post subject: |
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Wouldn't it have been just as easy to give a figure than ask me to use the search function.
Because most incidences are people with a B'Ed or a Masters in Ed, or 4 years experience etc. I have used the search function a number of times. |
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kowlooner

Joined: 24 Jun 2004 Posts: 230 Location: HK, BCC (former)
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2010 4:05 pm Post subject: |
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To answer your question a bit more directly, you'll be going in as a teacher with one year's teaching experience, and since it was kindy work you were doing, it may or may not be considered relevant (especially if you hope to avoid kindy work!). Your other work experience may be considered as a positive on the basis of presumably learning responsibility and good work habits, but otherwise you'll probably be seen as a near-newbie. So, depending on the place, you'll looking at anywhere between $12k and $18-$20k. Doubtful much more. Good luck. |
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cormac
Joined: 04 Nov 2008 Posts: 768 Location: Xi'an (XTU)
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Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2010 7:12 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks for the reply. Appreciated. |
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A'Moo

Joined: 21 Jan 2007 Posts: 1067 Location: a supermarket that sells cheese
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Posted: Tue Aug 03, 2010 2:02 pm Post subject: |
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Smokey Dando wrote: |
In my opinion if you are not being rewarded financially then there is simply no reason to be here. |
So true. This is why engineers who would be lucky to be making 80-90k US a year need to be renumerated in the 200k US range here. HK constantly tries to image itself in that "East meet West" vein, but it misses in both areas-being neither as fun, different, exciting as Thailand or China, and lacking the culture and sophistication of many places in the west. They have public ad campaigns telling people that they should flush and not spit in public (to no avail). People are, in general, rude, would say the rudest on earth but I think that their cantonese-speaking neighbour (Macao) may own that distinction. Look up, I think, 11:59 or yes sir i can bogeys posts-he's spent the time to truly describe HK, and should be required reading for anyone considering coming here for anything more than a stopover (unless your salary is above 30,000hk a month, then you can afford the items that can keep you occupied)... |
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Jospeh
Joined: 15 May 2010 Posts: 11
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Posted: Sat Sep 04, 2010 3:45 pm Post subject: |
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I'm back. As in, back to this thread and back to Hong Kong for another year. I'm still in two minds as to how I feel about the place, but I wanted to stay because I have friends here (local and expat) and given the current job market, who knows what I would have found back home. The difference - I have a new job (also at a primary school - I'm a NET, but not an EDB NET), a much heavier workload (although the kids don't start full timetable until Tuesday, so I haven't experienced it at full force yet) and a salary that has risen from HK$13k to 30k.
I'm going to save a ton this year! I love my new flat and the area I'm living in - and I'm splitting the $8800 rent with a friend, so I'm only paying $400/month more than I was last year (it's in an old building but is newly renovated; it's unfurnished but we're buying cheapo Ikea and second hand. Just in case people think I'm living in a hovel). I imagine my living costs will go up simply because I know I can afford to splurge, but there isn't that much I felt 'deprived' of last year. I'll probably buy more imported cheese.
Smokey Dando wrote: |
For example, I work at a vocational college. I'm making about $36K + private accomodation. We had a young guy from the UK doing language activities and the like with us and he was making about $15K with no extras. This salary is probably in line with his experience and qualifications but it did not allow him to live any kind of expatriate lifestyle that many of us take for granted. Hong Kong is a noisy and difficult place to live and work in. In my opinion if you are not being rewarded financially then there is simply no reason to be here. |
What comprises "the expatriate lifestyle" and how much does it cost? I'm not doubting you, I'm just curious about how the other half lives. I'm still very much in the student/backpacker mindset - as I said upthread, I lived on 13k just fine. Some things will change now that I'm on 30k - I ate out whenever I wanted before, but now I can eat out at more expensive places ($60-100 a meal). Like last year, I'll go to the cinema, museums, events, etc. reasonably regularly (I'm more limited by time, not money - although I've again avoided working weekends). I don't spend much on clothes, shoes, toiletries or gadgets, but I buy what I want, when I want. We have internet but no TV (neither of us watch it). Books are free from the library. I miss European culture, yes, but being able to go to China for the weekend makes up for that. There's not much I do at home that I can't do here - or that there isn't a suitable substitute for. In short, I really don't find it a trial to live here.
Presumably you're in a very different place to me in life - maybe you have a family to support, for example. What don't I do that those living The Expatriate Lifestyle do? |
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