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2008-04-13 | The Rich Get Richer

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标签: Salary  Money  Jobs  economy  Consumers 

The Rich Get Richer

PARADE's 25th annual "What People Earn" salary survey finds celebs, CEOs, athletes -- and one very lucky dog -- are raking in the dough.

How the economy looks to you: Almost two-thirds of respondents to a national survey say they're hopeful about what 2008 has in store for them, even though a majority of them, like many experts, believe we are already in the midst of a recession.

By PARADE Magazine

What did you want to be when you grew up? A doctor? An actress? A Super Bowl champ? A hospital clown? A CEO? A psychic? "What People Earn," the annual salary survey conducted by PARADE, offers an eye-opening look this weekend at how much Americans are getting paid in jobs ranging fro the mundane to the fabulous. Predictably, the survey shows a huge disparity between the wages earned by celebrities, CEOs and pro athletes and the take-home pay of ordinary Americans. In fact, the 18 celebrities featured in the survey -- the magazine's 25th in as many years -- made an astronomical 100 times more than the 112 "regular" people who participated.

Ironically, one of the biggest earners in this year's survey, which will be available through newspapers nationwide on Sunday, is Leona Helmsley's 8-year-old white Maltese canine, Trouble, who banked $12 million in 2007, thanks to a trust created by the deceased real estate tycoon. The dog's portfolio stands in a stark contrast to the $50,000 annual salary that Heather Schatz, a 27-year-old veterinarian from St. Louis, Mo., earns for treating animals.

Television personalities raked in substantial salaries in 2007, ranging from small-screen self-help guru Dr. Phil McGraw, 57, who earned $90 million, to TV and radio host Ryan Seacrest, 33, who took home $12 million. Today show host Meredith Vieira, 54, racked up $10 million, the same amount as comedian Jeff Foxworthy, 49. But all of these earnings look paltry in comparison to those of TV personality Oprah Winfrey, 54, a one-woman cottage industry who earned a whopping $260 million last year, tops among the featured celebrities in the report. Meanwhile, Ted Dawson, a 64-year-old sportscaster from Idaho Falls, Idaho, earned $33,500, and Chelsea Lynn, 23, a television reporter from Anchorage, Alaska, brought home only $28,900.

Not many people can make Oprah look cash-poor, but 52-year-old hedge-fund manager John Paulson does a pretty good job. He raked in $3.5 billion last year. Other businessmen with astronomical earnings include Boeing CEO James McNerney, 58, who made $19 million in 2007, and Kerry Killinger, 58, CEO of Washington Mutual, who made $5.25 million. Ordinary cogs in America's corporate machinery, meanwhile, did less well: Payroll administrator Kim Leisure, 41, of Ocoee, Fla., banked $41,000; telephone operator Ken Hammock, 66, from Oxford, Ala., $12,000; Barbara Ferguson, 39, a financial analyst from Springfield, Ill., $33,800; and Leah McRae, a 24-year-old ad-agency employee from Kernersville, N.C., $28,000.

Film actresses did well. Scarlett Johansson, 23, made $5 million last year; Jessica Alba, 26, made $9 million, and Katherine Heigl, 29, made $11 million. The money is even better on the other side of the camera: Director Steven Spielberg, 61, banked a cool $110 million in 2007. Providing solid evidence that art doesn't always imitate life, TV actress Mariska Hargitay, 44, earned $7 million for portraying a New York City police detective on the hit NBC show Law & Order: SVU, while Jessica Townshed, 33, a real-life crime-scene technician from Mobile, Ala., earned $35,000, and Joshua Shelton, a 25-year-old police detective from Fayetteville, Ga., earned $40,000.

Athletes also scored heavily in 2007. Golf phenom Tiger Woods, 32, took home $115 million, while Super Bowl MVP Eli Manning, 27, earned a giant paycheck of $11.5 million. Jeanette Lee, 36, a billiards player from Mooresville, Tenn., pocketed $650,000, while Jason Miller, 34, a rodeo steer wrestler from Lance Creek, Wyo., earned $178,000.

The distinction of earning the least in PARADE's survey belongs to Edward Perry, a 26-year-old Peace Corps volunteer from Los Angeles, who made only $2,900 in 2007.

Whatever they earn, Americans remain cautious about spending as the U.S. economy tightens. According to a nationally representative poll conducted by PARADE in conjunction with its "What People Earn" report, 75% of respondents said they made sacrifices last year to make ends meet -- 68% dialed back vacation plans, 67% dined out less frequently, and 52% put off home improvements. Among their biggest financial concerns: the cost of fuel (39%), saving for retirement (16%) and the cost of health insurance (14%). A whopping 93% think the economy should be the top concern of the presidential candidates.

Are you underpaid? Click to compare yourself to others.

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http://news.yahoo.com/page/parade-earn/economy-sp

 

What People Earn: How Does Your Salary Stack Up?

By Lynn Brenner
Published: April 13, 2008

Americans are optimistic and resilient by nature. We’re upbeat about our personal prospects despite our anxiety about the current economy. Almost two-thirds of respondents to a national survey say they’re hopeful about what 2008 has in store for them, even though a majority of them, like many experts, believe we are already in the midst of a recession.

Wages Are Down

It’s tough out there: Hiring has slowed, unemployment is rising, and most salaries haven’t kept pace with the cost of basics such as groceries, gasoline and health care.

The U.S. is losing jobs for the first time since 2004. February’s loss of 101,000 jobs was the biggest drop in five years and the third monthly loss in a row.

Both high-end and low-end retailers are reporting slower sales, a sign that consumers at every income level are tightening their belts. As demand falls, many employers have cut their workers’ hours. The Labor Department says more than 600,000 people now work part-time because they can’t find full-time work. A growing number of Americans have been out of work for more than six months. The unemployment rate is expected to rise from 4.8% to 5.5% this year—and experts say it would be even higher if so many people hadn’t given up looking for work.

The nation’s median salary last year was $36,140 (half of all workers made more, half made less). After inflation, that’s almost 0.5% below the 2006 median salary. The average 2007 pay increase was less than 4%, and many Americans got smaller raises or none. Meanwhile, the Consumer Price Index rose 4.3%. We now spend almost 5% more for food, 8.6% more for hospital services and a whopping 35% more for gasoline than we did a year ago.

Health Costs Soar

Health-care costs also are on the rise. Americans whose jobs provide health insurance paid about 11% more for it last year and probably will pay an additional 10% in 2008. Coverage is even more expensive for independent contractors. “I pay about 25% of my monthly income for health insurance for my daughter and myself—by far the least-expensive policy I found,” says Michele Elder, 44, a freelance talent manager in Portland, Ore. Still, Elder feels lucky to have it. Indeed, 76% of Americans who are insured told a recent survey they’d rather have $7500 of health benefits at work than a $7500 raise.

Paychecks Won’t Stretch

Even people with good jobs feel they’re losing ground. “I’m lucky to get a small raise each January, but it’s not even close to keeping up with the cost of living,” says Randy T. Bubar, 45, a software developer in Maine who made $58,000 last year. “I feel I have less money in my pocket at the end of each month after paying the bills.”

Many PARADE interviewees echo his words. “Money just doesn’t stretch as far as it used to,” says Gary Zell, 42, who made $77,500 as a National Weather Service meteorologist in Tucson. Karen Freeman, 32, who earned $65,000 as an architect in Atlanta, expects her salary to improve this year. “But I do not believe my money will be worth as much in 2008,” she adds.

The Job Market Contracts

A major housing downturn and nationwide belt-tightening are having a big impact on the job market. The biggest layoffs have been in construction, manufacturing and financial services. Indeed, experts predict that up to 20% of securities-industry workers may lose their jobs. Bear Stearns—Wall Street’s fifth-largest investment bank—collapsed in March and was sold at a fire-sale price. Many of its 14,000 employees may be laid off.

As consumers spend less, hotels, restaurants and other service companies are experiencing their slowest growth in years, so they’re holding off on hiring.

And older workers aren’t retiring. In the mid-1980s, only 18% of people in their late 60s worked. Today, that figure is 29% and growing .

Consumers Cut Back

Americans are responding to today’s economic realities by spending more cautiously, borrowing less and trying to save more. “In the past, we used the equity on our home to make major purchases without a second thought,” says Karen Koen, 49, a laboratory scientist in Woodbury, Minn., who earned $65,000 last year. “Now, we’re focused on getting the mortgage paid off.”

“We’re in self-preservation mode,” says Sean Abid, summing up the American consumer’s new attitude. Abid, 40, earned $61,400 as a high school guidance counselor in Henderson, Nev. He and his wife have stopped traveling for pleasure and have limited their daughter’s extracurricular activities to gymnastics. “We couldn’t afford swimming and dance classes,” he says. 

Deborah Baker, 48, an illustrator at the Army’s support center in Fort Knox, Ky., says she now buys generic grocery items instead of name brands. “I budget just to get from one paycheck to the next,” adds Baker, who earned $32,000 last year. “I have $40 for gas and have to cut down excess traveling to make it last two weeks.”

The soaring cost of oil, now around $100 a barrel, also has driven up the cost of petrochemical-based products—from lipstick, shampoo and shower curtains to polyester clothing and computer parts.


____________________________________________________________________

Where the Jobs Are
 
Where the jobs are: Even in a recession, some sectors of the economy are likely to keep growing -- among them education, health care, security services and information technology.

By Lynn Brenner, PARADE Magazine

Even in a recession, some sectors of the economy are likely to keep growing -- among them education, health care, security services and information technology. As entertainment increasingly is distributed online, there's a growing demand for designers, writers and art directors with tech skills. Dottie Martin, 36, who made $83,600 as an editor for an entertainment website last year, loves her job. Her words confirm what many we spoke with say -- that, in any economy, the best jobs provide emotional as well as financial rewards. "Although I've been doing it for almost three years now," says Martin, "I still pinch myself because it essentially doesn't seem like work."

 
Good Jobs For Right Now

In a struggling economy, some jobs are more recession-proof than others

Energy. Jobs related to oil, gas and nuclear power remain essential and in demand. Positions range from scientists to engineers to rig and well workers.

Security. The Defense and Homeland Security departments are attempting to fill 83,000 civilian jobs, from auditors to program analysts.

Accounting. Managing corporate finances is especially important during lean times. “Job-board sites list more than 325,000 accounting and finance openings right now,” says Rick Moore of Volte Services Group.

Wireless Support. With a mobile workforce, companies need professionals who can maintain wireless networks and protect information security. 

Database Administration. As companies become more reliant on data for research, sales, and marketing, there is an increased need for database administrators.
_____________________________________________________________________

Good Jobs For The Future

Many of the fastest-growing, best-paying jobs are in new media, law and information technology

Information technology
In an economy reliant on technology, professionals who can design, develop and maintain computer systems are crucial. Chief information officers are commanding salaries of more than $200,000. Systems analysts can make more than $91,000.

Law
Lawyers are in high demand in areas including intellectual property, corporate law and litigation. First-year attorneys are starting out at $72,500 in small firms and as high as $137,000 at large firms. Legal-support workers are finding jobs plentiful and salaries healthy too. Legal librarians make as much as $69,500 a year, while calendar clerks can earn up to $46,750.

New media
The rapid growth of the Internet is fueling a boom in online media jobs. A creative director, responsible for website content and presentation, can attract a salary ranging from $80,000 to $120,000. On the business side, advertising salespeople are earning up to $103,500.
_______________________________________________________________________


PARADE’s annual “What People Earn” salary roundup is not a scientific study. Photo captions reflect the salary information provided by the participants and available sources. Celebrity earnings were compiled through published sources and with the assistance of Salary.com. Additional research and photography coordinated by J. Tyler Pappas Creative.

 

 

 

 

http://www.parade.com/articles/editions/2008/edition_04-13-2008/1What_People_Earn

http://news.yahoo.com/page/parade-earn/jobs

 

What Salary You Can Make In...

By PARADE Magazine

Entertainment
George Clooney may earn $20 million per movie, but he's a rarity. Overall, the median wage for actors in the U.S. is less than $12 per hour, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. As for the rest of the crew, they're clearly doing it for the glamour, not the money.
 

The median wage for a movie or television writer is just $5,000 a year.

A costume designer or makeup artist can earn more than $2,000 a week. But since work comes on a project basis, year-round employment is not guaranteed.

Production assistants typically earn just $8 an hour.

TV show directors can earn upward of $35,000 for a single one-hour episode -- if they hit it big.

Health Care
Jobs in health care have soared 45% in the last 15 years, and experts expect opportunities to continue to grow as the population ages.

The U.S. will need more than 500,000 new nurses by 2016. Median salary for a registered nurse: $57,280.

Many of the fastest-growing occupations are medicine-related. Pharmacy technicians average $12.32 an hour. Medical transcribers can earn $17 an hour.

Family doctors and pediatricians are in demand, as more medical students pursue higher-paying fields like dermatology (average salary: $390,274) and plastic surgery (average salary: $412,000).

Education
There will be 2.8 million new teaching-related jobs over the next eight years, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

Spanish-speaking educators will be particularly sought-after: The need for bilingual and English as a Second-Language (ESL) teachers has increased in each of the last three years.

Overall, demand is up in 53 different education fields since last year. Administrators, teaching assistants and custodians are especially needed.


Are you underpaid? Click to compare yourself to others.

You could be $50,000 richer. Click for your chance to win.

Do you want to be part of next year's What People Earn Survey?

 

 

http://news.yahoo.com/page/parade-earn/salary-make;_ylt=AtR.GUhLCM504Kkql5h3dlVaZJZ4

 

How the Economy Looks to You

By Lynn Brenner, PARADE Magazine

Americans are optimistic and resilient by nature. We're upbeat about our personal prospects despite our anxiety about the current economy. Almost two-thirds of respondents to a national survey say they're hopeful about what 2008 has in store for them, even though a majority of them, like many experts, believe we are already in the midst of a recession.

Wages Are Down

It's tough out there: Hiring has slowed, unemployment is rising, and most salaries haven't kept pace with the cost of basics such as groceries, gasoline and health care.

The U.S. is losing jobs for the first time since 2004. February's loss of 101,000 jobs was the biggest drop in five years and the third monthly loss in a row.

Both high-end and low-end retailers are reporting slower sales, a sign that consumers at every income level are tightening their belts. As demand falls, many employers have cut their workers' hours. The Labor Department says more than 600,000 people now work part-time because they can't find full-time work. A growing number of Americans have been out of work for more than six months. The unemployment rate is expected to rise from 4.8% to 5.5% this year -- and experts say it would be even higher if so many people hadn't given up looking for work.

The nation's median salary last year was $36,140 (half of all workers made more, half made less). After inflation, that's almost 0.5% below the 2006 median salary. The average 2007 pay increase was less than 4%, and many Americans got smaller raises or none. Meanwhile, the Consumer Price Index rose 4.3%. We now spend almost 5% more for food, 8.6% more for hospital services and a whopping 35% more for gasoline than we did a year ago.

Health Costs Soar

Health-care costs also are on the rise. Americans whose jobs provide health insurance paid about 11% more for it last year and probably will pay an additional 10% in 2008. Coverage is even more expensive for independent contractors. "I pay about 25% of my monthly income for health insurance for my daughter and myself -- by far the least-expensive policy I found," says Michele Elder, 44, a freelance talent manager in Portland, Ore. Still, Elder feels lucky to have it. Indeed, 76% of Americans who are insured told a recent survey they'd rather have $7500 of health benefits at work than a $7500 raise.

Paychecks Won't Stretch

Even people with good jobs feel they're losing ground. "I'm lucky to get a small raise each January, but it's not even close to keeping up with the cost of living," says Randy T. Bubar, 45, a software developer in Maine who made $58,000 last year. "I feel I have less money in my pocket at the end of each month after paying the bills."

Many PARADE interviewees echo his words. "Money just doesn't stretch as far as it used to," says Gary Zell, 42, who made $77,500 as a National Weather Service meteorologist in Tucson. Karen Freeman, 32, who earned $65,000 as an architect in Atlanta, expects her salary to improve this year. "But I do not believe my money will be worth as much in 2008," she adds.

The Job Market Contracts

A major housing downturn and nationwide belt-tightening are having a big impact on the job market. The biggest layoffs have been in construction, manufacturing and financial services. Indeed, experts predict that up to 20% of securities-industry workers may lose their jobs. Bear Stearns -- Wall Street's fifth-largest investment bank -- collapsed in March and was sold at a fire-sale price. Many of its 14,000 employees may be laid off.

As consumers spend less, hotels, restaurants and other service companies are experiencing their slowest growth in years, so they're holding off on hiring.

And older workers aren't retiring. In the mid-1980s, only 18% of people in their late 60s worked. Today, that figure is 29% and growing.

Consumers Cut Back

Americans are responding to today's economic realities by spending more cautiously, borrowing less and trying to save more. "In the past, we used the equity on our home to make major purchases without a second thought," says Karen Koen, 49, a laboratory scientist in Woodbury, Minn., who earned $65,000 last year. "Now, we're focused on getting the mortgage paid off."

"We're in self-preservation mode," says Sean Abid, summing up the American consumer's new attitude. Abid, 40, earned $61,400 as a high school guidance counselor in Henderson, Nev. He and his wife have stopped traveling for pleasure and have limited their daughter's extracurricular activities to gymnastics. "We couldn't afford swimming and dance classes," he says.

Deborah Baker, 48, an illustrator at the Army's support center in Fort Knox, Ky., says she now buys generic grocery items instead of name brands. "I budget just to get from one paycheck to the next," adds Baker, who earned $32,000 last year. "I have $40 for gas and have to cut down excess traveling to make it last two weeks."

The soaring cost of oil, now around $100 a barrel, also has driven up the cost of petrochemical-based products -- from lipstick, shampoo and shower curtains to polyester clothing and computer parts.

Impact on Mainstreet

Money is tight. A national survey by PARADE shows that nearly 75% of us made sacrifices last year to make ends meet, and a third of us worry that our jobs are in danger.

1) What is your biggest financial concern?
The price of fuel: 39%
Saving for retirement: 16%
The cost of health insurance: 14%
Mortgage payments: 13%
Sending my kids to college: 4%

2) Have you had to make sacrifices over the last year to make ends meet?
Yes: 74%
No: 26%

3) What have you had to sacrifice?
Vacation plans: 68%
Dining out: 67%
Home improvements: 52%
Going to the movies: 50%
Designer clothes: 34%
Jewelry: 32%

4) Do you save money each pay period, or are you living paycheck to paycheck?
I have nothing left for saving after meeting my expenses: 43%
I save a small amount: 37%
I save a significant amount: 14%
I spend more than I make: 6%

5) If you receive a tax rebate this year, what are you most likely to do with the money?
Pay off debt: 41%
Save it: 19%
Spend it on ordinary expenses: 17%
Treat myself: 7%

6) Are you concerned that you might lose your job?
Not very concerned: 36%
Not at all concerned: 30%
Somewhat concerned: 25%
Very concerned: 9%

7) Which of the following professionals most deserve a pay raise?
Teachers: 41%
Military personnel: 32%
Nurses: 9%
Social workers: 4%
Clergy: 2%

8) Which of the following statements best describes your dream job?
Makes a difference in people's lives: 37%
Pays really, really well: 31%
Fun: 25%
Easy: 6%
Glamorous: 1%

9) Do you agree or disagree that the economy should be the Presidential candidates' top concern?
Agree: 93%
Disagree: 7%

10) Within the past year, has your household's financial situation improved, gotten worse or stayed the same?
Stayed the same: 40%
Gotten worse: 40%
Improved: 20%

 

 

 

http://news.yahoo.com/page/parade-earn/economy;_ylt=ApUnvPXfx64UePYYC2CJLqFaZJZ4

 

What's Happening To Your Money

Your money: How you’re saving, timing on retirement and student debt are all factors in to what’s happening to your money.

By PARADE Magazine

People Are Saving Less

  • The Commerce Department reports that Americans are saving at the lowest rate since the Great Depression.
  • Personal savings stood at a national level of negative $6.2 million in January.
  • About 40% of Americans say they are saving nothing for retirement. One reason: Over the past year, inflation rose 4.3% while salaries rose only 3.4%.
  • One in four Americans told the Employee Benefit Research Institute that they have no savings at all.

Retirement Is Coming Later and Later

  • The percentage of Americans 55 or older working full-time increased from 54.2% in 1993 to 64.4% in 2005.
  • Nearly one in four people between 65 and 74 was still in the labor force in 2006, compared with just one in five in 2000.
  • A recent study indicates that 17% of workers have suffered a reduction of retirement benefits offered by their employers in the last two years. Of these, only one-third say they are saving more for their retirement as a result.

Student Debt Is Piling Up

  • Tuition costs have climbed 60% since 2000, and the average graduating senior now owes more than $20,000, according to the National Center for Education Statistics -- twice as much as graduates owed a decade ago.
  • Nearly a quarter of recent grads owe in excess of $25,000.
  • While student debt rose 8% from 2005 to 2006, starting salaries rose only 4%.

 

 

 

http://news.yahoo.com/page/parade-earn/your-money;_ylt=AnLdSGb6gaKX_IyQxHUut8laZJZ4

 

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