1615_not-searchable
/en/arbeid-og-lonn/statistikker/lonnprivund/aar
1615
Monthly earnings up NOK 1 400
statistikk
2008-03-05T10:00:00.000Z
Labour market and earnings
en
lonnprivund, Earnings in private education, private schools, nursery nurses, teachersEarnings and labour costs, Labour market and earnings
false

Earnings in private education1 October 2007

The 2015 wage statistics for all industrial sections and various areas in the public sector will be released collectively on 3 March 2016 in the statistics Earnings of all employees.

Content

Published:

This is an archived release.

Go to latest release

Monthly earnings up NOK 1 400

Monthly earnings for full-time employees in private education were NOK 32 300 at 1 October 2007. This was an increase of NOK 1 400 or 4.7 per cent from 2006.

Full-time employees in primary education had monthly earnings of NOK 27 900, an increase of NOK 1 200 or 4.4 per cent. In comparison monthly earnings for employees in secondary education were NOK 32 400, which corresponds to an increase of NOK 1 300 or 4.3 per cent. In private higher education monthly earnings amounted to NOK 36 200, up NOK 1 500 or 4.2 per cent from 2006.

Average annual earnings

Employees in private education had annual earnings of NOK 383 200 in 2007. This was an increase of NOK 15 500 or 4.2 per cent compared to 2006.

The statistics are based on a sample of enterprises with 4 138 full-time employees. According to preliminary figures from the national accounts for the third quarter of 2007, the statistics cover about 16 300 employees in private education.

The term average monthly earnings is the main term in Statistics Norway's wage statistics. Monthly earnings cover basic salaries, variable additional allowances and bonuses. Payment for overtime work is not included. The increase in monthly earnings differs somewhat from the increase in annual earnings. The monthly earnings are compared at a specific date each year, while the change in annual earnings is from one calendar year to the next. Information for two years is used in the calculation, as well as information from wage negotiations. Estimated annual earnings for the current year are preliminary until wage statistics for the following year have been compiled.

Tables: