I have an offer to do my phd in PSI in villegen with a salary of 52k for 3 years.
I dont know how much will be left after deduction but i guess it is very low for a phd student in switzerland. what is ur suggestion?
I have an offer to do my phd in PSI in villegen with a salary of 52k for 3 years.
I dont know how much will be left after deduction but i guess it is very low for a phd student in switzerland. what is ur suggestion?
Best of luck never-the-less
I have two friends doing Phd's at ETH and one of them is making 52k, like you were offered, the other makes a little less.
Both of them are in relatively high-paying labs.
Friends doing Phd's in other universities make much less than that.
I am unfamiliar with the system in CH, but I can't imagine it would be that different.
To all intents and purposes, the PhD salary is a real salary. From that you have to pay health insurance, tax and unemployment insurance.
However - 52k CHF whilst doing a PhD is pretty much as good as it gets, in CH or elsewhere.
According to your calculations, CHF 2'000 for rent and additional CHF 1'000 for food, you seem to have pretty high standards OR you are supporting a family of 4.
We are two and spend less than CHF 600 on food per calendar month and it doesn't take a phd'er to figure out that you will reach pretty close to CHF 21'000 per year if you save CHF 400 per month in addition to the CHF 16'000 you have set aside... Don't forget, you're still indirectly a "student".
I get the feeling your are mistranslating some of the information you are being given.
Yes, social costs and tax are deducted from your wage, but this is your pension and unemployment insurance. This will be around 15% of your wage in total.
The figures for food and accommodation are probably what the PSI suggests you budget. They are not taken from your wage directly.
The amount of money you need to "renew" your permit is your wage before deductions. They are just checking you are making enough to support yourself. 52 kCHF/yr is plenty to survive on - thousands of PhD students are doing so right now.
I really think you need to take time to find a German speaker who can translate the PSI's information accurately, or you need to write down all your questions and ring up their administration staff and get them answered. This will save you a lot of time and stress in the long run.
When I was working as a PhD student at epfl, lausanne, in 2002/2003, the salary was 2800 CHF per month, and that was 75% (100% was 3500chf). Dont think it changed much though.
regards
Note the sarcasm