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Korea job or Japan. which leaves more in ur pocket?
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martinpil



Joined: 03 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Fri Dec 19, 2008 7:34 am    Post subject: Korea job or Japan. which leaves more in ur pocket? Reply with quote

Really speaking the best paid jobs are in the Middle East, not Korea. Japan doesn't seem bad at the moment coz of the strong Yen. When I was there 10 years ago, it was 190 yen to the pound and I earned a basic 250k a month. Then, up to last year, the Yen was about 220 to the pound which made it hardly worth getting out of bed for 250k a month ( i wasnt there though). Now, it's about 135 yen to the pound, so it is extremely GOOD money.

But looking at the Won, you have to ask yourself why anyone would want to work for 2.5m won a month...That's about �1300 or $2000. Now 250,000 japanese yen is currently �1900 or $2750 a month. This makes the two countries about the same WORTHWHILENESS, if theres such a word, to live in at the moment for EFL teachers (coz japan u have 2 pay ur own flat)

But which country leaves more in your pocket if you are an average joe/jo who doesn't splash out overly so?
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BS.Dos.



Joined: 29 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Fri Dec 19, 2008 7:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

*edit*

Wrong post.
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oskinny1



Joined: 10 Nov 2006
Location: Right behind you!

PostPosted: Fri Dec 19, 2008 8:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am working in Japan now. After rent and taxes I make about 190,000 yen a month. I can save about 100,000 of that. When I was in Korea (before the meltdown of the won) I was saving 1.5 million.

Sad thing is that salaries in both countries haven't changed at all in the 10 years you spoke of.
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quilter



Joined: 11 Feb 2006

PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 4:11 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think a big thing to consider is private classes. In Japan you can make a lot of money teaching privates with little or no consequences. I more than doubled my salary doing them. Here in Korea I wouldn't risk it, although lots of people do them. I was in Japan for 8 years, and it took me about a year really get up and running with the privates.
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chris_J2



Joined: 17 Apr 2006
Location: From Brisbane, Au.

PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 5:14 pm    Post subject: Japan -Vs- Korea Reply with quote

Don't forget to deduct a return airfare to/from your home country, if considering Japan. Tax rates in Japan were 11%, plus local prefecture taxes, last time I looked. In Korea, the top tax rate for foreign ESL teachers is 3%.
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Donghae



Joined: 24 Dec 2003
Location: Fukuoka, Japan

PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 5:39 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The minimum salary when you were in Japan, OP, was 250,000yen. But that minimum no longer exists and many jobs now offer significantly less. And whereas in Korea you'd probably get free accommodation with the job, in Japan you almost certainly will not and will therefore have to subtract whatever you're paying in rent to compare with a monthly salary in Korea. Also, as mentioned above, there's the airfare to pay yourself for many Japanese jobs and you don't get the extra month's salary at the end of your 1 year contract that you do in Korea.

I know people recently arrived in Japan who are getting around 230,000yen a month and pay 60,000yen in rent. Of course, there are all the utility bills to pay as well your usual living expenses. One guy I know who's on that salary tells me that if he tries REALLY hard he can just about save 70,000yen a month, but that in some months he has to draw on his money back in England (not a good option at present rates) because he's run out of money before payday. I think that scenario is easily avoidable with a bit of common sense, but at the same time it takes no more than a little reckless spending to end up skint before payday for some people.

I don't really agree that you're necessarily significantly better off for private lessons in Japan. Yes, you can safely do privates whereas in Korea you're not supposed to do them on an E2 visa and can be deported if caught. However, even if you have enough energy to do them in what little free time you may get, they don't pay a lot these days. It's not uncommon for teachers in Japan to be offering private lessons for as little as Y1000 an hour. Of course, you CAN do better than that but as the previous poster said, it takes quite a while to be able to build up a network of private students who will both pay well and not mess you about. It was difficult to do this anyway, and these days even more so.

On the other hand, whilst salaries in Japan are the same or less than when the OP was last there, the same is true of prices of everyday things. Korea has become a lot more expensive over the last 10 years, whereas Japan hasn't changed so much.

Another thing, OP - are you going to be sending money back to the UK every month? Exchange rates don't mean anything unless you're actually changing money. However exciting it is for some Brits in Japan now to calculate the equivalent of their salary in pounds comapred to a year ago, it's utterly meaningless unless you're sending money back....and have actually saved money to send back in the first place.
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oskinny1



Joined: 10 Nov 2006
Location: Right behind you!

PostPosted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 6:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Donghae wrote:

I know people recently arrived in Japan who are getting around 230,000yen a month and pay 60,000yen in rent. Of course, there are all the utility bills to pay as well your usual living expenses. One guy I know who's on that salary tells me that if he tries REALLY hard he can just about save 70,000yen a month, but that in some months he has to draw on his money back in England (not a good option at present rates) because he's run out of money before payday.

It's not uncommon for teachers in Japan to be offering private lessons for as little as Y1000 an hour.


These people are idiots (which Donghae has said in not so many words). If you want to live in the heart of any city you are going to be paying a lot. I live in a Tokyo suburb (takes 25 minutes to get to Tokyo station) and am paying 50,000 for a 2 room apartment that is 1 minute walk from a train station.

I suppose though after adding in the pension, ticket and severance you would be doing better in Korea, but then it comes down to the lifestyle you want to live. I think Japan is much better but still miss Korea at times.
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martinpil



Joined: 03 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 1:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

why do you think Japan is much better oskinny? I haven't ever been there. Some guys said don't ten years ago, because korean guys don't like it if you take a girl out and other problems. I liked Japan, everyone was so nice, the girls hot, it was just the expense of the place. I also had to draw out money from my credit card coz I was always spending money on entertainment.

If I went back now though, I think I would just come home and sit ina local cafebar/restaurant bar for the evening instead of trekking into Roppongi for example. I hope the japanese girls are still generous with their wallets like they used to be as well Smile I dont know how a poster here can save 100K yen though, that sounds unrealistic. I know how much the rents are (50-80k) so that leaves you with about 120K on a basic salary of 250. Of course with the privates, you can maybe top that up. It's a sad fact that EFL teaching is only on a par with Bar staff salaries in Japan. Bar staff also get 250K. They are actually the lowest paid jobs in Japan. But unless clients will pay more for lessons, it always will be 250 a month. Anyway, so it seems like Korea is the best option due to free accommodation and only 3% tax. I would have to send money home yes, so I have to weigh it all up.
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Donghae



Joined: 24 Dec 2003
Location: Fukuoka, Japan

PostPosted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 4:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

oskinny1 wrote:
Donghae wrote:

I know people recently arrived in Japan who are getting around 230,000yen a month and pay 60,000yen in rent. Of course, there are all the utility bills to pay as well your usual living expenses. One guy I know who's on that salary tells me that if he tries REALLY hard he can just about save 70,000yen a month, but that in some months he has to draw on his money back in England (not a good option at present rates) because he's run out of money before payday.

It's not uncommon for teachers in Japan to be offering private lessons for as little as Y1000 an hour.


These people are idiots (which Donghae has said in not so many words). If you want to live in the heart of any city you are going to be paying a lot. I live in a Tokyo suburb (takes 25 minutes to get to Tokyo station) and am paying 50,000 for a 2 room apartment that is 1 minute walk from a train station.




Yes and no. Certainly, I'd agree that someone who's been in Japan more than a year or so and is still getting shafted over their accommodation just like they were when they arrived probably (but not definitely because individual situations can vary a lot) only has themselves to blame.

These days in Japan it's a lot easier than it ever used to be as a foreigner to arrange your own accommodation. But it still requires quite a bit of legwork. There are still plenty of real estate agents who won't deal with foreigners, or even worse, will make a pretence of dealing with you but only take you around the absolute shiteholes they haven't been able to get anyone to take for 6 months or so.

The 2 big stumbling blocks for many foreigners in Japan that kept many people in their rip-off school provided accommodation longer than seemed sensible were (1) the need for a Japanese guarantor & (2)having to pay anything from 3-6 months rent up front (plus all the costs of moving and furnishing) just to move in. It's now possible to get round these 2 problems, but usually only one of them - it's much harder to find a place where you neither need a Japanese guarantor nor a shedload of cash to move in.

So, yes, once you're settled in Japan and have had enough time to prepare the groundwork for it, you should be able to get a better deal if your employer is shafting you for rent. But this is not a realistic option for many new arrivals. And even in rare cases when it is, there'll be a pretty huge expense involved and that will have to be money you've brought with you from home. In the OP's case from the UK, the present exchange rate will make that all the more expensive.
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egrog1717



Joined: 12 Mar 2008

PostPosted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 4:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Airfare, an apartment and a month's severance... That was all it took to get me to choose Korea over Japan
(I'm not a huge stickler for culture, and had very little cash coming over here, so it was an easy choice...)
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martinpil



Joined: 03 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Mon Dec 22, 2008 3:53 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Egrog

How much did you take with you at first? Did u already have a job to go to? When you say free accommodation do you mean that literally, like u just take the keys from your boss or boss's estate agent and move straight in without payin so much as $1?
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Ukon



Joined: 29 Jan 2008

PostPosted: Mon Dec 22, 2008 4:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

martinpil wrote:
Egrog

How much did you take with you at first? Did u already have a job to go to? When you say free accommodation do you mean that literally, like u just take the keys from your boss or boss's estate agent and move straight in without payin so much as $1?


Yes, that's exactly it...you pretty much only pay for food and entertainment once you get off the plane...
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martinpil



Joined: 03 Dec 2008

PostPosted: Mon Dec 22, 2008 6:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I wonder what the food is like. I am not too smitten on japanese food, but I used to get by. I believe they eat dog in korea.....scary huh? I hope the hamburgers at Mcdonalds are really beef....(0_0)
o
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Xuanzang



Joined: 10 Apr 2007
Location: Sadang

PostPosted: Mon Dec 22, 2008 6:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

martinpil wrote:
I wonder what the food is like. I am not too smitten on japanese food, but I used to get by. I believe they eat dog in korea.....scary huh? I hope the hamburgers at Mcdonalds are really beef....(0_0)
o


That`s being very unfair to Korea...
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egrog1717



Joined: 12 Mar 2008

PostPosted: Mon Dec 22, 2008 10:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

martinpil wrote:
Egrog

How much did you take with you at first? Did u already have a job to go to? When you say free accommodation do you mean that literally, like u just take the keys from your boss or boss's estate agent and move straight in without payin so much as $1?


I had $200 Canadian with me when I stepped off the plane, and SMOE (Seoul Metropolitian Office of Education - I have a Public School job in Seoul) gave me another 300k won within about 2 weeks of my arrival as a part of my contract... It was enough to see me through my first 3 weeks until payday (but only just... My med check-up was 65k, and I had to go back for a liver ultrasound that was 75k, plus a Dr. visit at 15k... Aparently being overweight after four years of university and drinking is hard on your liver Razz... They had to ensure that I had a fatty liver and not Hep C, despite having been immunized for that in grade 7, lol....)

By free accommodation I mean almost just that... After I received my cash from the SMOE (called a "resettlement fee") I had to pay my apartment maintance fee (50k per month) but that was it until after my first pay day (another 50k for the next month's maintance fee, plus maybe 20k for hydro and gas)... So yes, basically free from the time I got off the plane...

Government jobs are pretty sweet deals if you can handle the work load... Like chair warming from noon to 4:40pm every day Razz hahaha...
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