| EDITORIAL >
The price of maturity
Written by: Philippe Riboton
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RECRUITERS and HR specialists all remember back in 1993, when
an IT company was advertising a managerial position that boasted
a seven-digit yearly gross salary. At the time, it sounded like
a myth; the kind of figure nobody would ever see in his entire
life. Ten years later, seven-digit annual gross salaries are quite
common for Czech managers, particularly among foreign-owned companies.
This stems mainly from the banking and IT industries setting the
employment market on fire. In the telecom sector it seemed for
a moment that the sky was the limit, and as banks fell one after
the other into foreign hands, a desperate hunt ensued for the scarce
talent that had experience with international companies. Now, for
the last year or so, it seems like this phenomenon has leveled
off, as most companies are now fully staffed. The explosion of
the Internet/Telco bubble, together with the global economic recession
and the downturn in the world stock markets have sent the clear
signal that the "golden era" is over. One source of evidence
for this is the remarkable rise in global unemployment - reaching
an average 10%, according to the latest data. Even more unprecedented
is the number of bright managerial profiles currently stymied in
their efforts to find a new job that would offer compensation approaching
the last position they enjoyed. Sure, companies have made their
overall packages more sophisticated, compounding material benefits
with such non-material benefits as company contributions to life
insurance plans or to lifestyle/education benefits like language
courses or MBA programs. Unfortunately, in most cases the motto
of the day is "salary freeze", so professional job shoppers
are no longer able to jump from one company to another, in an effort
to boost their salary by a few hundred or thousand crowns. Nor
are greedy managers as likely to put a V8 leather-clad limousine
on their list of expectations. This is certainly bad news for some,
but it's also the long-awaited sign that the Czech employment market
has reached maturity. Finally.
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