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#hiring
Title
# hiring
c

cedric

12/22/2017, 4:08 PM
I'm curious, the 200,000 rubles, is that per year or month? Either doesn't seem right
l

louiscad

12/22/2017, 4:26 PM
@cedric Can't be per year, that would be less than 3K€ per year
n

nfrankel

12/22/2017, 5:03 PM
why “per month” wouldn’t be right? i mean, it’s not moscow cost of living might not be that high plus, it’s 3-6 years of experience which makes the salary pretty good for that level of experience in russia it’s not silicon valley!
c

cedric

12/22/2017, 5:03 PM
Yeah it has to be monthly
n

nfrankel

12/22/2017, 5:04 PM
if you want to confirm, apply 😉
it’s a bit cold for me
c

cedric

12/22/2017, 5:05 PM
Also 200k is about $6700 if I converted correctly
So around $90k annually
n

nfrankel

12/22/2017, 5:08 PM
it’s much less for me
Screen Shot 2017-12-22 at 18.07.28.png
c

cedric

12/22/2017, 5:10 PM
Oh wow you're right
So now it looks pretty low for an expensive city like st Petersburg
m

moonsweel

12/22/2017, 5:32 PM
Hi from Russia, it’s per month and fine for this city. Also notice that this number is “from”, and you can negotiate it to higher numbers.
And here in Russia, when we talk about salary, we use netto value. And even 200.000 rubles is brutto, subtract 13%.
n

nfrankel

12/22/2017, 5:41 PM
Also notice that this number is “from”
well, you have to know some russian to understand “ot” is “from” 😉
m

moonsweel

12/22/2017, 5:42 PM
Google translates this correclty
And I’ve read full desc, they mention netto wage, so 200.000+ is what you have after you pay taxes. (Actually, a company pays taxes for you here in Russia).
c

cedric

12/22/2017, 5:54 PM
Interesting, thanks for the clarifications @moonsweel
p

pivovarit

12/23/2017, 6:20 AM
@moonsweel at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter who pays taxes - it’s a deduction from a budget reserved for you 🙂