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TOP STORIESGUEST COMMENT: Why I took a 70% pay cut22 October 2009COMMENTSMan, I didn;t think life could get any worse this morning and then I read this - going to work in Singapore on 70% less pay. You really are paying the penalty. Read all comments »Monday marked the first day of my return to the working class. More than a year after I left my previous position, I had finally secured and accepted an offer to return to the financial services industry. From my previous sales-trading jobs with a broker in New York, I will soon be making the transition to a research position with a local investment bank in one of Southeast Asia’s smaller markets. To be frank, debating with myself over whether to accept this offer was just as hard as landing the offer itself. On one hand, taking the job means a sizeable (70 per cent!) pay cut and it is also a more junior position than my previous one. As a consolation, the lower tax rate and cost of living in my new country does soften up the blow significantly. My career on the trading desk is also coming to an end, and I am starting out as a freshie in a different role. This was one of the biggest obstacles in my mind. While my peers who were lucky enough to avoid the layoffs are moving on to senior roles and bigger responsibilities, I am taking a step back and restarting the game. But I suppose this was not really an issue at all - another half-year out of the market and I might as well have been a fresh graduate with zero prior market experience. Despite all the minuses of this position, my craving for some career stability was simply too strong to ignore. Accepting this offer means the end of an exhausting job search. I've finished with flying for hours and staying in budget hotel rooms on my own expense (whatever happened to companies paying for candidate’s travel?) only to end up with fruitless interviews and the chance to repeat the process every fortnight. Before the turbulence of the past year, the freedom and financial capacity to plan for classes and vacations with a degree of certainty never seemed like a luxury. And the paycheck! How great will it be to not have to dig into my reserves every month to pay off my business school loan anymore? An additional factor that I had to consider for this offer is that I cannot make my new job simply a temporary shelter for the next year or so until the market gets better. Given that I was out of the market for a year, and this is a new job function for me, I need to stay for a minimum duration of two or three years. Risking more short-term damage to my resume is the last thing I want to do now. Not an easy decision at all. It took me a week to finally convince myself to take it. Ultimately the single most important reason I accepted the offer was because this gives me a fighting chance to stay in the same industry that I had grown to like over the years and still would like to make a long-term career of. To me, the only thing worse than restarting at a junior position in a different function, is restarting at a junior position in a different industry. This article first appeared on our Singapore site.
COMMENTSHector, Private Equity / Venture Capital, Thu 22 Oct 09Man, I didn;t think life could get any worse this morning and then I read this - going to work in Singapore on 70% less pay. You really are paying the penalty. Add your comment »apples10, Thu 22 Oct 09I think you have made a wise decision, good luck. However, sounds like your job search was interesting, travelling every 2-weeks, even at your own expence. I've been out and searching for a few months now, 1 interview, and I cycled to that one !! Add your comment »Associate, Corporate Banking, Thu 22 Oct 09Good article. I agree on the point about the difficulty in associating with the lower classes. In addition to it being difficulty to come to terms with, it is perhaps the most unpleasant experience that an upper class person can endure.
Max1, Trading, Thu 22 Oct 09Sarah finally an amazing article, real and honest coming straight from the industry. There are thousand of people in the same situation. These are better articles, than having some "experts" telling us how to write a "winning" cover letter, and insulting our intelligence. Toucghdicesions need to be made these days and its all a matter of character. Good luck. Add your comment »mhkhan, Thu 22 Oct 09Somehow I would rather start in a new industry at the junior level rahter than in the same which one may justify as starting afresh. But I wish you the best for your decision. Its not easy either way. Add your comment »davidcain, Thu 22 Oct 09"Associate" - your rather snobbish comments miss the point entirely. Read the article again, more slowly this time, and then think how that possibly relates to what you have written. Add your comment »david, Thu 22 Oct 09"Associate" - your rather snobbish comments miss the point entirely. Read the article again, more slowly this time, and then think how that possibly relates to what you have written. Add your comment »luckyEd, Capital Markets, Thu 22 Oct 09agree with the other comments..nice article and honest to boot.
Jam, Credit, Thu 22 Oct 09the snobbish comments amused me. they reminded me of the time i worked at RBS (280 bishopsgate) for a neanderthal six foot thug covered in tatoos who lived in essex, enjoyed caravanning and suffered from a brian disorder. terrible thing was that he was a senior manager in their lending unit. look back on it and laugh now - but think that it would bring the snobbishness out in anyone. Add your comment »Nim, Student, Wed 28 Oct 09Singapore is actually SEA's largest market, and one of the 4 key markets in the world. So I doubt he is going to Singapore.
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