A few people here are over-analising being paid in BitCoin. Say your wages are $ 1,000 and you end up with in the hand $ 850 - that amount is translated into BTC (less a nominal transaction fee) - Regardless of the price rising or falling, you were paid $ 850 in bitcoin, so that's what you were paid... $ 850.
I feel like it can be valuable information, but I don't get what you mean, tbh. Why someone is receiving $850 instead of $1,000? You don't mean that transaction fee can be $150 today, right? So, what happens with $150 then? Or do you mean income taxes on wages?
TAXES - I was meaning taxes.
Also, most people don't care about the purchasing power of their salary at the time of payment. They want it to be stable, for several months, at least, for their convenience. People don't want to gamble with their salary.
The one real problem being paid in bitcoin has at the moment is the volatile nature of the price Vs the dollar. It's comparable to the great depression. You would work till noon, get paid, go out and buy *anything* work the rest of the day get paid again and what you were paid would have less buying power, so you again go out and buy with what little money you made. You end up not saving any funds and can't afford to buy anything more than essentials: Bread Milk tea/coffee...