Maaf kalau x-posting, diambil dari milis tetangga tentang pekerja industri
ekstraksi sumberdaya alam yang menikmati lonjakan pendapatan yang luar biasa
lantaran "booming" komoditi dan kurangnya tenaga kerja
terlatih/berpengalaman.
Dari hari ke hari makin banyak profesional Indonesia yang pindah ke
Australia, ini membuktikan sudah lancarnya "arus balik" Ind --> Aus.



----- Original Message -----
*From:* Ievan Ludjio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*To:* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Sent:* Wednesday, January 10, 2007 8:11 PM
*Subject:* {indostrali:35} Pay day for tradesmen

*Pay day for tradesmen*

January 10, 2007 06:00am

Article from: [image: The Daily
Telegraph]<http://www.dailytelegraph.news.com.au/?from=ni_story>

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*KING Gees have become the uniform of the nation's top earners.*

Industrial workers, power plant operators and mine blasting workers are now
among the nation's highest earners, ranking alongside dentists, doctors and
lawyers, says labour market analyst Rodney Stinson.

Mr Stinson, from Sydney, has listed the findings in the latest edition of
his annual guide *What Jobs Pay*, which assesses the highest and lowest paid
jobs in 2005/06.

Riding on the back of the resources boom, the trades have enjoyed huge wage
rises of up to 298 per cent over the past 20 years, bringing their average
weekly salary to between $1423 and $1974 - or $102,648 a year.

At the other end of the scale, sales trainees, cooks and hairdressers are
paid the least, earning from just $394 a week ($20,488 a year).

Despite substantial wage rises in the past 20 years, nurses and teachers are
well behind the highest earners.

Nurses, aided by a shortage of skilled labour, have won wage increases of
244 per cent, bringing their average weekly pay to $961.

Teachers' wages have risen by 205 per cent, with primary school teachers
getting $1062 a week and high school teachers, $1149.

But economists, IT workers and mining engineers have won the highest wage
increases - ranging from 243 per cent to 407 per cent since 1986, according
to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

CommSec economist Martin Arnold said the increases in the mining sector had
caused average earnings in Western Australia to surpass NSW for the first
time.

"It's a direct result of the commodities boom and Western Australia being a
resources-rich state," he said.

"There's a lack of skilled tradespeople and mining companies are having to
spend the money to attract good people."




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