Wage slip
Series: Property Week ; 67(9) 8 March 2002, 36-41(6)Publication details: 2002Subject(s): Summary: Summarises the key findings of the RICS and Macdonald & Company survey of surveyors' salaries. Results are based on responses from 3 099 participants spanning the profession. The average salary across the industry without bonuses now stands at £35 517, an increase on £34 710 for 2001. While surveyors in fund management and investment brokerage benefit from the biggest increases, the annual salary for surveyors of 56 years old and above has fallen for the first time by 10%. The survey also reveals that dissatisfaction among new recruits is growing with almost 50% stating they would leave the profession if they were no longer in their current job. 2002 Salary Survey available from http://www.rics.org. Graphs. Charts.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | ABS65432 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 117506-1001 |
Summarises the key findings of the RICS and Macdonald & Company survey of surveyors' salaries. Results are based on responses from 3 099 participants spanning the profession. The average salary across the industry without bonuses now stands at £35 517, an increase on £34 710 for 2001. While surveyors in fund management and investment brokerage benefit from the biggest increases, the annual salary for surveyors of 56 years old and above has fallen for the first time by 10%. The survey also reveals that dissatisfaction among new recruits is growing with almost 50% stating they would leave the profession if they were no longer in their current job. 2002 Salary Survey available from http://www.rics.org. Graphs. Charts.