Sentences with phrase «average pay adjusted»

Not exact matches

Under a tentative deal that would require approval from the Common Council, the city would pay $ 60,000 a year for two years to help the 60 to 80 Benderson regulars adjust to the Salvation Army program, which averages 40 to 60 people a day.
podcast, I learned how little workers are paid, such as the workers in Bangladesh that are paid as little as $ 1.40 / hour on average, and that number is adjusted for the fact that it is cheaper to live there.
The study also found that teachers» average hourly pay (in real terms, after adjusting for inflation) has decreased by 15 per cent since 2009/10.
Average for past OUSD head honchos (permanent and interim from 2012 - 15) is $ 294,776 in total pay ($ 275,911 in base salary, not adjusted for inflation, though the numbers are all pretty recent); remember, they all have been male.
«Most states have reduced average teacher pay since 2010, after adjusting for inflation, but Arizona and Oklahoma are among the deepest - cutting states.»
The average amount of benefits paid per Wisconsin teacher has continued to drop in real, inflation - adjusted terms in subsequent years, as shown in Figure 1.
During the expansion of teacher collective bargaining in the mid-twentieth century, economists from Harvard and the Australian National University found, the average, inflation - adjusted salary for U.S. teachers rose modestly — while «the range of the [pay] scale narrowed sharply.»
Miles» report, which analyzed both state and national public school spending trends, pointed to numerous shortfalls in the state's school finance structure, including that North Carolina has the fifth lowest average teacher salary in the nation when adjusted for cost - of - living, and that the state's teachers earn only about 67 percent of the pay given to «similarly - educated, non-teachers.»
If the interest rates on your other debt - car or student loan or mortgage - is higher than what you could earn by saving or investing (consider that the average annual inflation - adjusted historical return of the U.S. stock market is just over 6 %), you'd be wise to pay that down first too.
The average lenghth someone owns a house is 7 years, plus in 7 years time, it might not adjust up, and even if it does, you can just accelerate your payments and pay it off quickly (this is the self insurance part of it).
Edit: Assumptions that usually land me in hot water are: long term rates at 4 % to 5 %, salary adjustments of ~ 4 % per year up to a cap (a cap equal to what a senior person in my industry is paid, has mimicked my salary raises surprisingly well actually), I assume a 20 % tax rate on earnings averaged over all accounts, then I seek to replace an «inflation» adjusted 100K at ~ 1.5 % per year (my real goal would be a CPI adjusted 100K into the future, which very likely would not be driven by inflation, but no one has one of those crystal balls).
It includes a lump - sum payment that is adjusted each year for inflation ($ 21,783.34 for 1998), plus the greater of half of your high - 3 average pay, or half of your annual rate of pay at death.
This figure may be adjusted to allow for any nights when the child stays overnight with the paying parent, based on the average number of «shared care» nights per week
You would have to gradually add one medicine at a time and adjust the dosages, always constantly checking with teachers and family members for the results of each adjustment, paying close attention to the average amount of time it takes for each medicine to kick in: for example, Adderall kicks in on the very same day and disappears that night, while Prozac takes several weeks to kick in and several weeks to get out of your system.
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