Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Newsroom buying power takes major hit in past 1 1/2 decades


The National Association of Colleges and Employers’ annual report on college graduates says that the average starting salary for journalism graduates is $41,000, substantially lower in newspaper newsrooms.

A study by the James M. Cox Jr. Center for International Mass Communication Training and Research at the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication found a median salary of $31,000 for recent grads.

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics put the median annual pay for reporters, correspondents and broadcast news analysts at $36,000.

And that’s for newspaper personnel who haven’t been hit by the substantial thinning of the herd, but have taken percentage pay cuts across the board, as newspapers try to hang onto as much of their profit margin as possible amid the onslaught of the Internet.

In comparison, Guild retiree John Olesky’s 1040 federal tax return for 1996, the year he retired from the Beacon Journal on July 1, had an adjusted gross income of $50,000. That was for six months of BJ paychecks and six months of only Social Security and BJ pension checks. 

According to a US Inflation Calculator using U.S. government Consumer Price Index data, it would take $73,165 in 2013 to have the same buying power as $50,000 in 1996. That means today's median newsroom income has half the buying power of the 1996 newsroom.


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