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SamMorgan2021-12-08 18:19:08
Career in IT
SamMorgan, 2021-12-08 18:19:08

Why does a .Net developer lag behind other back-end developers in terms of salary growth?

At the beginning of the year, I chose jap and web development technology to change jobs. I chose between .Net, Java, Python and Go, guided by the complexity of the entry, the number of vacancies and the average salary. I settled on .Net, studied and found a job.
And here recently, from every sneaker comes "Salaries of developers in IT in 2021 began to grow every month", "Java developers are back on horseback" and so on. In our company, half of the Java development team from a third-party project has gone to a better place in the last half a year. Legends in the working chats say that our senior from the Java team was taken by the well-known yellow bank for 500k wooden ones. The company began to raise the salaries of the Javasts in order to enter the market. But this miracle did not happen with our .Net team, just like the same guys with the same fork, they remained. I talked with my curator and asked why he also did not go to a better place. He denied that only Java is now growing salaries.
I started looking at vacancies from HH to telegram groups, comparing with different languages ​​and the period when I was just choosing a language at the beginning of the year. Indeed, the Javists have increased their level very noticeably, while .Net has not changed much, except for the number of vacancies themselves, which has increased. For the rest of the back-end development languages ​​(PHP, Python, etc.), salaries have reached the .Net level, or even higher, compared to the beginning of the year. I’m generally silent about Golang, a signora with knowledge of English is offered a completely indecent price tag in USD.
Why Java developers have grown so much in terms of salary compared to .Net, even though they share the general enterprise development market and revolve in the same subject area?
And for what reason did the rest of the back yap begin to catch up and overtake .Net in terms of salary? Doesn't this indicate a low demand for .Net developers and a lack of new projects on .Net?

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3 answer(s)
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Anton Shamanov, 2021-12-08
@SilenceOfWinter

And for what reason did the rest of the back yap begin to catch up and overtake .Net in terms of salary?

the price tag is the same everywhere, just don’t measure hats that don’t fit you yet ...
.Net was originally created as an answer to Java, incl. about catching up, you’re in vain) It doesn’t matter what you write on (I know people who write on fortran for good money), if your level is at least middle, then to put it mildly, they won’t let you die of hunger. and if you drink a couple of your successful open source decisions, it’s enough for retirement)

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taktik, 2021-12-08
@taktik

The salary level does not depend on the language, but on the subject area. The highest paid areas are fintech, banks, e-commerce, telecoms, blockchains.
If you look at vacancies in these areas, for example, in Moscow, you will notice that C # is much less common than java or Go. Less demand - slower growth of salary

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Puma Thailand, 2021-12-09
@opium

Well, you compared your ass with a finger, where the cruel
Legacy Enterprise and Sberbank startups are constantly rolling out new ones and releasing old ones.

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