Louis Toadvine
AH enthusiast
I started my first job in 1990 at $36K. I was living okay on that, but certainly didn't have money to burn.
$36K was a pretty strong entry-level wage in 1990. Factoring for inflation, that's quite a bit higher than the average entry-level engineer today.
$36K in 1990 = $88,778 as of June 2024 using a CPI calculator - https://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl?cost1=36000&year1=199001&year2=202406)
Average entry-level engineer salary in the U.S. as of summer 2024: The below sources show a mean entry-level salary across different industries of $68,018, with a higher average in the more technical industries like aerospace, chemical, and electrical. https://www.mtu.edu/engineering/outreach/welcome/salary/
Obviously this is not a perfect analysis, as not all areas of engineering are equal, and using an average wage is difficult because the U.S. is a huge country with a large variety of local averages and vastly different costs of living from place-to-place. But I'm guessing you were hired into one of the more technical engineering roles and/or were a sought after (above average) candidate.
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