broadsword
Brigadier
There is a certain kind of satisfaction money can't buy.
That's music to my ears. I didn't know that; I was convinced by my friends that 20,000 yuan a month is quite shoddy in Beijing, especially considering what I do. I have 2 friends who do the same; one earns $170K a year in Houston; he's got more money than he knows what to do with. And I've got another friend who went to work for a Chinese genetics company in Shanghai starting at 1,000,000 yuan annually, but I don't want to do that because his job is to develop better ways to make money for the company while my angle will be how to provide affordable high quality medical genetics services to the patients. People have told me that with just this paltry sum, I can give up my dreams of marrying a bombshell dancer 10 years younger than me; my girlfriend says I better marry her because she's a lawyer and she can haul in the big bucks to support the family of 5 that I want. She teases that with my salary in Beijing, I couldn't afford to keep 3 dogs much less 3 kids. Guess I'm not so helpless after all, eh? hahaThat's 34 000 $ per year, not bad for a salary in China. If living in Shanghai, should be equivalent to 79 000 $ if living in NY, according to Numbeo. One can live a comfy, though not luxurious life with that money. With prospects of increasing salary, end earnings might even even reach equivalent of a six figure salary.
That's music to my ears. I didn't know that; I was convinced by my friends that 20,000 yuan a month is quite shoddy in Beijing, especially considering what I do. I have 2 friends who do the same; one earns $170K a year in Houston; he's got more money than he knows what to do with. And I've got another friend who went to work for a Chinese genetics company in Shanghai starting at 1,000,000 yuan annually, but I don't want to do that because his job is to develop better ways to make money for the company while my angle will be how to provide affordable high quality medical genetics services to the patients. People have told me that with just this paltry sum, I can give up my dreams of marrying a bombshell dancer 10 years younger than me; my girlfriend says I better marry her because she's a lawyer and she can haul in the big bucks to support the family of 5 that I want. She teases that with my salary in Beijing, I couldn't afford to keep 3 dogs much less 3 kids. Guess I'm not so helpless after all, eh? haha
To hear that I can live comfortably but not luxuriously is the best financial encouragement I've ever gotten. I am not a man of luxury; I am a man of substance. I was taught growing up that the only things worth coveting are the muscles on your body and the knowledge in your mind and the only luxury worth having is the pride that you are doing right. If I won a billion dollars in the lottery tomorrow, I'd still do the same work, drive the same car, and live in the same place; money is just a number to me as long as it's enough to live reasonably on. All I want is to serve my country and to raise my children to do the same.
That's 34 000 $ per year, not bad for a salary in China. If living in Shanghai, should be equivalent to 79 000 $ if living in NY, according to Numbeo. One can live a comfy, though not luxurious life with that money. With prospects of increasing salary, end earnings might even even reach equivalent of a six figure salary.
How much can software engineers make in Shanghai?You will have trouble living in Shanghai with $34k USD /year. My friends in the Shanghai IT sector are making >$500k RMB /year. Shanghai living is more expensive than many North American cities
How much can software engineers make in Shanghai?
I have yet to complete my studies in medical genetics. Afterwards, I'm going back to China, and I'm throwing away a six figure USD starting salary for a genetics director job in the US for what is likely to be a starting salary of just 20,000 yuan a month salary to go, all because I would rather serve Chinese patients than American ones. Believe me when I say I'm not a hypocrite in what I ask of others.
The problem is very clear. The only reason this conversation can still be going on is that you don't understand that the likelihood of a Chinese person being loyal to China is far greater than the likelihood of a non-Chinese person being loyal to China so the recruitment drive should focus on recovering Chinese talent that can be loyal and long-lasting rather than a foreigner whose relationship with China is much more likely to be short and completely compensation-based. You continue to interpret this statement to mean that all Chinese people are expected to throw away their establishments and move back to China for peanuts. It's your English reading capability that's causing this loop we're in.
I've addressed all your points but you have missed all of mine. The best way for you to continue would be to reread all my posts to you and address them point-by-point if you can.
it's going to be interesting for you to read that post let's say five years down the road (no sarcasm, no psychoanalysis here; it's kind of remarkable what you wrote)That's music to my ears. I didn't know that; I was convinced by my friends that 20,000 yuan a month is quite shoddy in Beijing, especially considering what I do. I have 2 friends who do the same; one earns $170K a year in Houston; he's got more money than he knows what to do with. And I've got another friend who went to work for a Chinese genetics company in Shanghai starting at 1,000,000 yuan annually, but I don't want to do that because his job is to develop better ways to make money for the company while my angle will be how to provide affordable high quality medical genetics services to the patients. People have told me that with just this paltry sum, I can give up my dreams of marrying a bombshell dancer 10 years younger than me; my girlfriend says I better marry her because she's a lawyer and she can haul in the big bucks to support the family of 5 that I want. She teases that with my salary in Beijing, I couldn't afford to keep 3 dogs much less 3 kids. Guess I'm not so helpless after all, eh? haha
To hear that I can live comfortably but not luxuriously is the best financial encouragement I've ever gotten. I am not a man of luxury; I am a man of substance. I was taught growing up that the only things worth coveting are the muscles on your body and the knowledge in your mind and the only luxury worth having is the pride that you are doing right. If I won a billion dollars in the lottery tomorrow, I'd still do the same work, drive the same car, and live in the same place; money is just a number to me as long as it's enough to live reasonably on. All I want is to serve my country and to raise my children to do the same.