Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - I work in Urumqi, and I am a civil servant. I want to know what the salary is.

I work in Urumqi, and I am a civil servant. I want to know what the salary is.

speaking of the treatment of civil servants in Xinjiang, many candidates are more concerned about it. How much is the salary of civil servants in Xinjiang? Generally speaking, the wages in northern and southern Xinjiang are different. The conditions in southern Xinjiang are poor, and subsidies are generally available. The conditions in northern Xinjiang are good, and the wages vary according to specific positions. I am afraid the specific salary situation is the most convincing for on-the-job personnel. Here are some netizens' self-feelings:

Viewpoint 1: The salary in northern Xinjiang is lower than that in southern Xinjiang < During the initial training, many mainland students in the initial class came to Xinjiang, mostly for the first time, and all of them were in southern Xinjiang. It's strange why they apply for southern Xinjiang instead of northern Xinjiang. There are two answers. First, they think southern Xinjiang is close to the mainland and it is convenient to go home. Second, this county has a nice name. Well, these answers are quite wonderful. When it comes to going home, I feel as if I have to change planes in Urumqi to go to the mainland. I don't know if there are any direct flights in southern Xinjiang. By train, it is indeed closer than northern Xinjiang. There is also a classmate who has been admitted to Tashkurgan County, the legendary Pamirs. He pondered that he should be admitted first and then transferred later. South Xinjiang moves to North Xinjiang, unless your background is hard enough, wait in line slowly, and you may be there in the next life. However, if the children of employees are admitted to our system, then parents can change their children to their parents' units after retirement. There are also some students who are purely editors and transferred back to the mainland after being admitted. There are many such students, and there is less competition in southern Xinjiang and it is easy to take the exam. Then, our system is in southern Xinjiang, and there are not many Han people, so we are basically leaders in the same batch now. I have been in northern Xinjiang for four years and I am still a small clerk. Well, that's it. I feel a little irrelevant. If you have a safety problem, it depends on where you took the exam. In some places, the impression is ok. Many colleagues are familiar with it and have not heard of anything. I didn't expect it in southern Xinjiang, and I have no right to speak. In addition, grass-roots units are basically on duty now, including weekends, and they have to go to the countryside or something. Before coming, it is best to ask someone you know. The salary is really low, well, at least in our system. The key point is that no one believes you when you say that the salary is low. Oh, it is said that wages in southern Xinjiang are not low, because border allowances are high.

opinion 2: which systems have high wages

first, whose wages are high? If the military, police, civil servants and other systems are really higher than other places (including pensions). Because the state subsidizes hard areas, the so-called hard areas are mostly in the west, but there are special cases in the east and west, as if there are specific grades, but they only work in these specific systems. (My dad is an armed police, and he has been in many places in Xinjiang. His salary, promotion and retirement are all affected by the years of work in "hard areas", but I don't know the details. I firmly took the liberal arts road.)

If I choose my own job and go to Xinjiang to find a job, the salary is really not high. Except for special industries such as oil, subject to the level of development, the income level of ordinary people is still low in the country. Some people have the impression that wages in Xinjiang are high, probably because people who come here to do business make more money. The local area is vast and sparsely populated, the economy is backward, and the folk customs are simple. Most people don't know how to do business, but they are rich in products. Many specialty products have no alternative origin in the country, and foreign businessmen really make more money.

point 3: is the consumption in Xinjiang relatively high?

Xinjiang is a region with the most special consumption in China. Almost all the products here are specialty products, and all the basic daily necessities are not produced locally. It is a transit point of the Silk Road. First of all, if you buy local products, fruits, dried fruits and cotton products, it will definitely be cheaper than the mainland. Watermelon is at least one yuan a catty in Beijing and 5 cents a kilogram in Xinjiang. Is it cheap? Secondly, it is relatively cheap to buy imported products from Asia and Europe, Russian fur, Turkish handicrafts, etc. A trip to Khorgos Port will definitely empty your pockets! Recently, the vehicle import port has also been opened, and buying pure imported luxury cars is tens of thousands cheaper than Dalian Port. These are all cheap because of the region, and also because of the region, basic daily necessities, such as clothing and toiletries, are very expensive in Xinjiang, and there are almost no discounts in supermarkets, and the styles of goods in shopping malls are also very old. The hand sanitizer I used in Beijing was a foam hand sanitizer, and the supermarket activities were 2% off. It took two years for Xinjiang to have such a thing, of course, at full price. Eating is the most important factor for everyone to measure consumption. The price of food in Xinjiang has risen rapidly, and now people can hardly afford mutton, and the price of vegetables remains high, because there is not so much land to grow, and it depends on transportation.

Generally speaking, the cost of living in Xinjiang is still relatively high. If you want to nourish yourself, you have to pay more than other regions.

The above is the salary of civil servants in Xinjiang, all compiled from the opinions of netizens living in Xinjiang. Although the opinions of netizens are different, they can reflect a general situation.