Why should a remote employee in Atlanta make more than an onsite one?
Not more, but why shouldn't they be paid the same if they're doing the same work?
And the answer is market rates but a lot of people don't like that answer.
Why should they pay person X more than needed to get the level of talent they want under the conditions they're willing to offer?
I'm not a cost cutting person, so I'm not interested by the former. Trying to play games with CoL signals that instead of putting money in growing the product, they would rather try to squeeze as much as they can.
There's enough disagreement about what this means that its difficult to say. If your goal is to buy a house, you'll be making more CoL adjusted. If you're happy to rent, its less clear cut but still probably close.
> Or am I more likely to be paid what an average developer in Atlanta can take home or just a bit more
More.
I remember a talk HR was giving about remote work. Someone asked about COL and salary adjustments. HR didn't mention cost of living, but they did mention cost of labor. That was a new term to me.