After your studies at University of Indonesia, you will get -depending on your study- between 5 and 8 juta per month. Exceptionally a bright IT kid might get 10 juta after his/her studies. So saying 33 is not enough for a teacher is somewhat out of place or plain populism.
The discussion about expat salaries and perks as English teacher in Indonesia will be a good discussion. But when someone is stating that earning US$24,000 a year as a teacher in Indonesia,
if recruited onshore (within Indonesia), is not a respected salary is
misleading. This misinformation could cause potential expat job seekers to reject offers based on
unrealistic expectations.
You might see expats, such as a General Manager working for an international hotel chain in Indonesia, earning a western salary of USD 500k+ per year, or staff from well-known multinational companies in the oil and mining industries (Chevron, Vale, Freeport, etc), or international consultancy firms (McKinsey, PwC, Deloitte, AECOM, Atkins, Arup, etc), or manufacturers (GE, Siemens, Mitsubishi, etc). However, it's highly likely that these individuals are on secondment, meaning they were already working for these companies in their home countries and were sent to Indonesia to help develop the new establish branches/businesses, training local people, uphold company policies, and maintain management and cultural standards. Alternatively, they might be recruited internationally by the headhunters and not locally in Indonesia, so they compete on an international level.
I have posted a few evidence in post #29. If the originator of the post or others want to rebuff, please provide evidence or links from reputable sources, or at least well-known sources.
I think a bunch of crazy, rich expats (




)
who live the "good" life isn't really representative.
I agree that while there are a number of wealthy expats in Indonesia, particularly those managing their own multinational businesses, working for their own family, friends, relatives businesses, but as you said it is likely they are not really a typical representative of expat lives in Indonesia. I have posted a few links example of expat lives in Indonesia from other dimension.
https://indonesiaexpat.id/featured/mixed-race-children/ Since this community is surely growing, not only in Bali but elsewhere, this is a really good article showing the practical issues involved, such as: Indonesians see them as foreigners, but their "other" country sees them as Indonesians...
www.expatindo.org
Also, it is generally understood that merely self-proclaiming wealth in a forum like this does not make one rich. I am not suggesting that those who claim as such are not actually wealthy, but rather that simply making such claims does not make someone rich like making this sort of statement in a forum.
In fact, many extremely wealthy Indonesians (if not the majority) live modestly. Also, evidence from the past shows that those flaunting their lifestyles in Indonesia are often fraudsters.
Here is Michael Bambang Hartono, one of the top ten richest people in Indonesia:
Other examples of the wealthy in Indonesia: