Want to make muchos monies without tearing your hair out?
Us too.
Australia’s top demographer Bernard Salt has been hard at work defining the four categories he says all full-time Aussie workers slot into: rich workaholics, worker robots, time-rich cash-poor, and rich lifestylers.
If you value family time, but also strive for a comfortable life, you should aim to slot into the mould of a rich lifestyler – meaning, those who work jobs that pay above the country’s average salary, but require less than 44 hours of work per week. Approximately 22 per cent of Australia’s 11 million full-timers slot into this comparably gentle, yet lucrative category.
“There are a whole range of jobs that you’ve probably never heard of that are hard to define … that are emerging that are creative, interesting and highly-skilled and offer by this assessment a good quality of life,” Salt told news.com.au this week.
“When you pull [the data] apart, the people who seem to have the best quality of jobs are those with skills and education who are creative — that’s really where the economy is growing and where jobs are being created.”
- Rich Workaholics: Those who earn above average wage, but work an average of 62 hours a week
- Worker Robots: The Aussies who put in long hours but take home below-average pay
- Time Rich, Cash Poor: Those who put in less time per week, and therefore earn less money
- Rich Lifestylers: Those who earn above average wage, but work less than average hours
Thankfully, a US expert in careers information has worked out the jobs we need to pursue to generate both a healthy income and achieve that elusive work-life balance of a Rich Lifestyler.
Financial aspirations are nothing to be sniffed at. It’s admirable to want to be successful in whatever it is you do. However, an unfortunate side effect of working hard in your occupation can often be stress.
The kind of stress that makes you devour entire bags of double-stuffed Oreos, or makes your skin break out and your heart race. Or has some other (actually serious), personal or physical implications.
Top Comments
this article is just so, so off the mark. Law teachers, no stress? yeah right. Political scientists? Are you kidding? Understanding the inner workings and failings of our society is a major cause for stress among the highly educated. Better to know less about the problems if stress is a concern.
Passed this article around our advertising agency - Art Directors low stress? I don't think so, with client demands and short deadlines it is one of the most demanding jobs.