Qatar Salary Survey 2009 Results
Only 7% of Qatar's professionals highly satisfied with salary despite being in top three in regions table of highest earners, latest Bayt.com and YouGov study reveals
77% of residents across the region hit hard by current economic crisis and 24% feeling pessimistic about current climate in job market
Doha, Qatar, 01 March 2009, Salary satisfaction is running low across the Middle East, with just 7% of residents in Qatar highly satisfied with their remuneration, according to recent research conducted by the Middle Easts number one job site - Bayt.com in conjunction with regional research specialists YouGov. The picture around the Gulf is similarly bleak with each of the GCC countries registering the same level of dissatisfaction regarding their salary.
The picture around the region in terms of what level of salary people receive varies widely the survey found. The UAE tops the table in terms of the biggest earners, with 20% earning between USD $5,000 and $10,000 each month, and 7% earning $10,000 and above. Bahrain and Qatar had similar levels of high earners, with 22% and 19% respectively earning between $5,000 and $10,000 each month, and 7% each earning more than $10,000 each month.
The lowest paid residents in the region are in the North African countries of Algeria, Egypt and Morocco. 54% of residents in Algeria earn under USD $500 per month, and just 4% were found near the top of the scale earning between $5,000 and $10,000 per month. In both Egypt and Morocco, 47% of residents receive under USD $500 per month, with 2% in each country earning $5,000-$10,000 per month and 1% in each country earning over $10,000 per month.
The Middle East Salary Survey, conducted annually by Bayt.com and YouGov, is designed to look at the current levels of wages and benefits in the region, and to gauge employee opinion and satisfaction levels vis-a-vis the salaries they receive, and how these have kept pace with the cost of living.
Conducting a wide-scale survey across the Middle East by asking what level of remuneration an employee receives and their satisfaction with it helps to paint a very clear picture of economic conditions inside a particular country. The relevance of such data increases manifold during a time like this a global economic crisis as it gives an up-to-date indication of employee sentiment, which can be used to compare peoples attitudes and opinions during other financial cycles, commented Bayt.coms Regional Manager, Amer Zureikat.
The data for the Salary Survey is collated in part by looking at whether average salary increases were in-line with the average rise in the cost of living. The picture was very clear that the average salary increase did not reflect the rise in the cost of living across all of the countries. In Qatar, respondents indicated that living costs had increased by 31% while the average salary increase was just 15%.
The biggest disparity in the increase in cost of living and salary raise is in Jordan, where salaries increased by 15% compared to the 39% increase in living costs, which backs up previous research about the Levant region being hardest hit by salaries, vis-�-vis cost of living. Algeria and Tunisia recorded the smallest margins in terms of disparity: with average salary raises of 12% and 9% respectively and the average cost of living increasing by 26% and 23%.
The survey also looked at what percentage of their salary people manage to save each month. The majority of all respondents manage to save between 1 and 5%. Significantly a quarter of all respondents said they manage to save none. The biggest savers were residents in Oman, Qatar and Bahrain, with 33%, and 30% respectively saving more than 21% of their monthly salary. Overall, the best savers are in Bahrain and Oman, where 83% of residents save at least some of their salary. Those saving the least are in Jordan, where just 54% of residents saved some of their monthly wages.
These figures reveal that even though some people receive much higher salaries in some countries than others, it doesnt correlate that these high earners save more money, which might have been expected. This could be explained by the disparity between cost of living and salary increases, or by the fact that the high earners seek a lifestyle that matches their high salary, said Nassim Ghrayeb, CEO, YouGov.
Interestingly, the survey highlighted the level of salary satisfaction in terms of industry. The most highly satisfied industry workers were found in the oil, gas and petrochemicals sector, which is traditionally known to be one of the most profit-generating sectors in the region, especially with the fact that oil/ gas is one of the Gulf regions largest exports. Despite the massive fall and subsequent stability of oil prices over the last year, salaries within the industry have seemingly been unaffected. The industries which provided least salary satisfaction to workers were education and academia, government and civil service and transport and travel.
The study additionally revealed that across the Middle East, 77% of residents feel they have been hard hit by the global economic crisis, with 28% of people in Qatar stating they have felt no effects. Residents in Egypt - 81% - were the hardest hit amongst the surveyed countries, while least affected was Oman, with more than a third - 37% - stating they have not been affected.
Asked their feelings about the current economic climate in terms of the labour market, almost a quarter of respondents said they feel quite pessimistic, with an equal 16% citing that they are either optimistic about economic growth and plenty of jobs being available; that jobs in their country of residence will be more competitive in the future; and that companies will continue to recruit but salaries will continue to decline. Egypt and the UAE were the gloomiest countries surveyed with 30% and 29% feeling pessimistic about the future, while Oman and Bahrains respondents were brightest, with 23% and 22% stating their optimism for economic growth and greater job availability. Almost a fifth (19%) of residents in Qatar felt positive about the future with 18% feeling quite pessimistic.
Recruitment industry professionals and organisations like Bayt.com as well as other industry stakeholders like major industry leaders find this type of timely and localized information highly beneficial as it provides a good starting point for identifying the trends that are driving these current sentiments, thus allowing them to focus or change their business strategies accordingly to address employees concerns, concluded Zureikat.
Data for the 2008/2009 Salary Survey was collected online in December 2008 and January 2009 with 13,881 respondents across the UAE, KSA, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria. Males and females of all nationalities aged over 20 years were included in the survey.
© 2009 Bayt.com, Inc.
in the midst of all this gloomy forecast, the only good news for me personally is that my husband is in the creamy layer of the lucky 7%!!!( if what the survey says is indeed true!!)
he always felt bored with his work, now I can tell him how lucky he is and how many people earn much lesser than him!!!
LOL! as is anybody would say they're happy with their salary and don't want any increases....
This is the result of a survey conducted last year, but the result is released this year, 2009. Technically, this is 2008 Survey Result.
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Everything happens for a
reason.
the title of your post is misleading.
This is not a Qatar survey. It covers the Middle East.
It is not a salary survey. It is a perception survey, i.e., the type that asks r u happy with your salary, and everybody says No.