League_Girl wrote:
Right now I am not sure what to vote for. I consider my social skills to be good for an aspie but they are poor compared to an NT. Even my husband has better social skills than me. I have a job and I work. I work by myself. I think we are below average income.
If you think they are good for an aspie but poor for an NT then maybe "Adequate/bare minimum social skills" would be the closest fit?
Merle wrote:
I disagree with the relationship between social skills and income. I hire people for their technical prowess, and not how well they interact with the team. At some point social skills may be important, but pretty much anything above 60,000 IMO requires specialization and not the ability to play well with others.
This is precisely what I have been wondering about. I can understand that, as Tallyman and others have said, social skills probably correlate with income
over the whole population, but perhaps high incomes taken separately don't necessarily correlate with good social skills.
It may be that
average income does correlate with social skills, because most/many mid-range jobs will require more of a mix of skills, and so you are less likely to have an average income if have poor or only just adequate social skills, but the sort of work which is most highly paid may divide up into two kinds, jobs which need social skills and those which don't so much if at all.
This might then explain why on the poll in Love and Dating ( link in OP ), looking at "income/employment status and sexual/relationship success" there are several highly paid people with no sexual partners ... ie. it is level of social skills rather than money which is making the difference to degree of sexual success ... Otherwise why aren't all, or almost all, of the highly-paid people sexually successful?
There are already a few "low(er) social skills and high income" votes; at time of posting 10 people have voted for high/above average income, of whom 4 see themselves as having good/excellent social skills, 3 as having adequate skills, and another 3 as having poor social skills ... which certainly suggests that high income does not correlate particularly with good social skills ...
But it would be good to have more votes to get a clearer/more conclusive picture.
Thank you very much everyone who has voted so far!
Please carry on voting!
.