University professors in France are paid far less than their peers in other countries as state bureaucracy prevents top researchers from negotiating higher salaries, new analysis suggests.
While most senior academics in France enjoy 鈥渁lmost total job security鈥 thanks to their 鈥渓ifetime positions鈥, professors are significantly underpaid compared with chairs in the UK, Germany and the US, according to a new study by Johannes Angermuller, professor of discourse at the University of Warwick, .
Comparing publicly available salary scales, Professor Angermuller highlights a huge pay deficit faced by French university professors in comparison with their international peers.
鈥淎fter taxes and charges, full professors should expect at least 拢40,000 in the UK, 鈧40,000 [拢34,668] in Germany and $50,000 [拢40,164]聽[in US state universities], but (theoretically) they can receive just over 鈧30,000 [拢26,001] in France,鈥 explains Professor Angermuller, who is also a member of the School of Advanced Studies in Social Sciences, a 驳谤补苍诲别听茅肠辞濒别聽that is part of Paris鈥 PSL Research University.
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Those at the top of end of professorial salary scales, which can hit about 拢120,000 at some UK universities, will also find limited financial rewards in France, says the study, which is titled 鈥淎cademic careers and the valuation of academics: a discursive perspective on status categories and academic salaries in France as compared to the US, Germany and Great Britain鈥.
鈥淚t is not uncommon to see some net salaries of senior academic staff rise to 拢60,000, 鈧80,000 and $200,000 [in the UK, Germany and US] respectively,鈥 explains Professor Angermuller.
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鈥淭he situation is different in France, where鈥nd-of-career professors鈥 [salaries] rarely exceed 鈧60,000,鈥 he adds.
Professor Angermuller, whose research is funded by the European Research Council, blames the limited earning power of French professors on the massive influence of the country鈥檚 state bureaucracy, in which 鈥渕ost academic staff are civil servants and almost all are paid by the central government following a single national salary system鈥.
Other factors also limited the salaries of French professors, the study says.聽For instance, French universities typically do not have strong deans or heads of departments who might be encouraged to recruit strategically on behalf of an institution, which would create a transfer market and higher wages for professors.
Meanwhile, the 鈥渞elative absence of an inter-institutional job market鈥, thanks to a job-for-life culture, means there is little appetite to lure researchers from rival institutions on better terms, the study adds.
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鈥淚n the absence of salary gaps between [institutions], which may force decision-makers to take candidates from outside more seriously, decision-makers tend to stick with local and well-connected candidates,鈥 it explains.
While some critics might attack the limited earning potential of French professors, who often hold academic positions at more than one institution, there are some positive aspects to the French system, Professor Angermuller argues.
鈥淭here is a high degree of relative institutional equality between junior and senior staff, democratic inclusion in decision-making and job autonomy and security of both junior and senior members,鈥 says Professor Angermuller, who adds that 鈥渟alary spreads as well as the number of precarious, non-standard contracts [are also kept] down鈥 by the French arrangements.
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