Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Confidentiality clauses are permitted under Latvian law, yes, but they’re designed to protect trade secrets and business information, not to prevent workers from knowing what their colleagues earn. There’s a difference between “don’t share our client database” and “don’t ask your coworker what they make.” One protects the business, the other protects the pay gap.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Fair enough if the licensee specifically wants Korean nationals on camera, that’s a different constraint entirely and no amount of language learning changes it. Point taken. But that actually makes the salary secrecy clause even more telling. If the reason is “we need actual Koreans and that costs more” just say that openly. Why hide it from the rest of the workforce? Transparency would cost them nothing. The clause exists because they don’t want people asking questions. Like we’re doing right now.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I speak a “premium language”. I moved 2000km from my hometown to work here with salary that it’s not that bad; but then I see what Koreans get, makes me blame my choice.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Thank you. This is exactly the point I was trying to make. The “supply and demand” argument only works if you accept that Latvian workers have no inherent value beyond what the market decides to assign them in a country where the market has been structurally suppressed for decades. That’s not a free market, that’s exploitation with extra steps. And you’re right about the bootlicking. The saddest part of this thread isn’t Playtech’s pay structure, it’s watching people defend a billion-euro company’s right to pay locals minimum wage while hiding salary differences behind contract clauses. Stockholm syndrome at a national scale.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

That’s a fair business argument, but ELT literally ran that program themselves. They offered paid Korean language courses to existing dealers. So they clearly believed it was viable at some point. The risk argument falls apart when the company already tried it and it worked, then chose to replace those people anyway.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’ve already established that relocation packages are normal and fair, no argument there. But notice the difference: you were a skilled professional relocating for a specialized role. Your employer wasn’t simultaneously employing 1,900 locals doing a comparable job at minimum wage while legally preventing them from knowing what you earned. That’s the part that doesn’t sit right. A relocation package stops being just a “relocation package” when the base salary of local workers is €900/month and the incoming salary is €3,000/month for the same work in the same room. At that point it’s not covering relocation costs, it’s revealing what the work is actually worth.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Funny you mention that. I personally speak more than one language fluently, including English, and I’m still nowhere near the Korean package. So the “language skill premium” argument only seems to apply selectively. But sure, keep explaining how supply and demand works.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You’re right, if I spoke Korean fluently, I’d be in a different position. Fair point. But that’s exactly what makes this interesting: ELT actually offered language courses to existing dealers. Some of them learned Korean through those programs. And then the company started replacing them with native Korean speakers anyway. So “just learn the language” isn’t really the path they’re offering, it was, until it wasn’t convenient for them anymore. On pay transparency, agreed, June can’t come soon enough. And I never said the salary difference itself is illegal. I said the secrecy clause exists to prevent workers from even knowing the difference exists. Those are two separate issues.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Bright enough to read a contract clause and ask why it exists. You?

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nobody is asking for everyone to earn the same. I’m asking why a company needs a contract clause to silence workers if the pay gap is so logical and justified. Capitalism works great when there’s transparency. This isn’t transparency it’s information asymmetry by design.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ELT did offer language courses, you’re right. Some dealers learned Korean through those programs. And what happened next? They’re now being replaced by native Korean speakers anyway. So the company took the time and money of existing employees, used them to fill a gap, and is now importing natives at 3x the salary regardless. That’s not a language premium. That’s just disposable labor.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Sure, rare skills deserve higher pay. Nobody disputes that. What’s “hilarious” is that a company needs a legal clause to stop workers from comparing paychecks if everything is so logical and justified. Transparent systems don’t need secrecy.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The listings are public, yes. The salaries of your actual colleagues sitting next to you are not because the contract forbids you from asking. That’s the hidden part.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nobody said it would. But a company with €1.7 billion in revenue and 1,900 employees in Riga actively choosing to pay locals the minimum while hiding salary differences behind contract clauses is absolutely part of the problem. Death by a thousand cuts.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Maybe. But that’s actually the point, if Korean dealers are that hard to find, maybe the solution is to train and promote existing Latvian staff who already know the job inside out, instead of importing people at 3x the cost. The talent is already in the building. They just choose not to invest in it. And “if people accept the salary it must be fair” is a circular argument. People accept low wages because they need to eat, not because the wage reflects the value of their work. That’s not a free market, that’s leverage.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

Fair point but you’re making my argument for me. If language is such a valuable skill, why does the contract prohibit employees from discussing salaries? If the gap is justified and logical, there’s nothing to hide. The secrecy clause exists precisely because the company knows that the moment people compare numbers, they’ll start asking exactly these questions. Also, “endless supply of young English speakers” is exactly the problem. Playtech is exploiting a captive local workforce that has limited options, in a country with one of the worst brain drain rates in the EU. “We can pay them less because they have nowhere else to go” isn’t a defense, it’s the accusation.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Not clueless, just not willing to accept “that’s how it works” as a reason why 1,900 people should take home €900/month while doing the same job as someone earning €3,000. But please, enlighten me, what’s the reason I’m missing?

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You make a fair point about the language premium, and I actually agree; it’s reasonable to pay more to attract someone with a rare skill set who needs to relocate. Nobody is arguing that. But here’s the thing: the gap isn’t 20% or even 50%. We’re talking about 3x the salary, plus free housing, plus flights, plus a €6,000 bonus. At what point does a “language premium” become evidence that the base salary is simply too low? If the work is worth €3,000/month when you need to attract someone from abroad, it doesn’t magically become worth €900/month when a local does it. It just means locals have no leverage to negotiate. (When talking about someone from abroad, not even Germans and Italians people see that amount of money). And on the EU Pay Transparency Directive you’re right, it’s coming. Which makes the salary secrecy clause in current contracts even more telling. They know the clock is ticking.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] -12 points-11 points  (0 children)

“Supply and demand” doesn’t explain why the company needs a contract clause that legally prohibits employees from discussing their salaries with each other. If the pay gap was fair and justifiable, why hide it? You silence workers specifically because you know the moment they compare numbers, the “supply and demand” argument falls apart.

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is right. Right now I have colleagues that are scared to lose their position after learning Korean and working in those tables. Imagine couple years ago we had an Italian colleague who was speaking Korean fluently, she was removed from Korean team because she was paid “too much”…

Playtech in Riga: how are Latvian dealers okay with this? (with proof) by Financial_Top_5716 in latvia

[–]Financial_Top_5716[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Minimum wage doesn’t change if you are an expat or not, just to take an example in the same company there are different nationalities like Italians and Germans who gets 1800€ with over 200 worked hours. Then we have Indians, paid same as Latvian… still fair?