Belarusians earn less in Poland than in Belarus
Pay attention to the following text messaging of Belarusians in Poland:
— How many hours do you work? 396?
— 370, plus 350 attendance bonus and 150 accommodation refund.
— I work 220 and consider it slavery.
— I would rather collect bottles in Germany than work 370 hours a month.
— 370? Do you work 12 hours a day, 7 days a week, 30 days a month?) hard. Where do you work?
— There is a plant called MA-3, it makes covers for the LG TV factory.
— Try applying for a refuge.
— Thank you, but we are not going to stay here)
— Are you moving to another country?
— Of course, with such norms of "productivity" for 370 hours, no one wants to stay))
— An ideal worker ... for 17 pln per hour for 16 hours a day)
An ideal, of course, for an employer.
— I used to be a deputy director in the Vitalur trading network, having a salary of $ 800 …
— At the factory you monthly have $ 670 (if working norm is 168 hours), and in Belarus your salary was $ 800 ...
Lebedeva: This means that the woman changed her life in Belarus, her own home and the position of deputy director of a large retail chain for the position of label sticker girl without days off and lunches. Isn't it funny?
Unfortunately, we didn’t find any factory with that name. What about working time, in Poland the norm is the same as in Belarus — 40 hours a week. This is relative to those who work on a contract basis. There are no such restrictions for those who are employed on the basis of an agency contract.
In reality, a plant with that name, as mentioned in the correspondence, could not be found in Poland, and the correspondence itself was truncated, which completely distorted its meaning.
Here is what it looked like in its entirety:
I used to be a deputy director in the Vitalur trading network, having a monthly salary of $800 ... Do you think this is a decent salary with such responsibility? It's close to a heart attack. Turns out, the woman considers the salary in a large Belarusian trade network to be insufficient for the efforts expended on it. We will see a more complete picture if we look at the correspondence above. In Poland she works a lot, but instead she earns 7,500 zlotys a month (1,700 dollars). And she does it to quickly save up for her own house in Belarus. As the woman explains, the Belarusian salary allows her husband and her to build a house in 20 years.