Two separate jobs where one is compensated in only wages while the other is compensated with wages and benefits will get equivalent amounts of compensation.
Wages and benefits: wages = $50 benefits = $50 total = $100
Benefits are not pulled out of some magical asshole where their cost is nullified. Benefits cost the employer money. If the employer is giving you benefits, it's because they're paying you less. There's nothing wrong with that, but it's basic math.
no subject
huh? what?
lets try
"if she had some sort of employment agreement that her
benefitswages wouldn't ever change, maybe she'd have a place for complaint in this scenario."cause usually wages are subject to change too?
how are benfits not like a wage?
no subject
You always get a wage, you don't always get benefits.
no subject
Lots of people don't get wages.
Sometimes they are called "intern"
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I do not think you know what that word means.
no subject
Wages only:
wages = $100
benefits = $0
total = $100
Wages and benefits:
wages = $50
benefits = $50
total = $100
Benefits are not pulled out of some magical asshole where their cost is nullified. Benefits cost the employer money. If the employer is giving you benefits, it's because they're paying you less. There's nothing wrong with that, but it's basic math.