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- 2011-7-11
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发表于 2011-10-6 04:10
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I moved back to New York as soon as I graduated from college five years ago. My all-in then was around $100K and I was fine. I guess it all depends on people's standards of living -- sure, I wasn't going out and doing bottle service all the time (because I think that's just a waste of money, and I had more senior people at my firm doing it so I'd just tag along when I could)...however, there are plenty of people that live in NYC and make less than $100K. NYC has some of the best places to eat, and they range from super expensive to super reasonable. Public transportation is the best out there. And, as long as you're tactical about pre-gaming before a night out on the town, you can avoid having to sell out $15 a pop for cocktails.
Having lived in other places before, I wouldn't even say that my day-to-day living expenses make a huge difference. I still buy my groceries on sale whenever possible; only do coffee or drink dates when I'm out with someone for the first time; etc. you get the idea. However, the places where I do feel the pinch are mostly in housing and in tax rate. If you're currently in a state where there are no state or local income taxes, add about 10% to what you're making now to see how that should change if you move to NYC. On the apartment side, if you want to afford something comparable to what you're living in now, factor in an additional $1,000 or so per month. Granted, this is a very rough way to ballpark it but your net adjustments to your "index" will be around +20% all else equal.
If it were me, I would ask for a 25% step-up in comp and see what they say. Might end up settling for +10-15% to your current comp, but it could always be worse.
Hope that helps...
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