or, "More illustration that Americans are lazy fatasses who think they should get paid for doing nothing"...http://money.cnn.com/2006/04/05/news/economy/jobs_immigrants/index.htm
4/6/2006 10:52:18 AM
capitalism is based on competition....makes sense
4/6/2006 10:53:37 AM
how does the president know so many names of terrorists but can't get the names of world leaders right?[Edited on April 6, 2006 at 10:53 AM. Reason : he just rattled off like 9 names]
4/6/2006 10:53:41 AM
These numbers are a little skewed, of course. I suspect the unemployment rate among young blacks is much higher than the rate for other native born workers.
4/6/2006 11:13:26 AM
^true. but the unemployment rate for whites is only 4.5%, so even then those evil evil evil foreigners are providing stiff competition (God bless them)...
4/6/2006 11:16:59 AM
As every Phd knows Sanjay and Zhiang are depressing wages of high skilled labor:http://www.nber.org/papers/w12085Good for the US economy and for the rate of innovation but bad for US scientists. Keep this study in mind next time you here some stupid pundit complain about the failure of the US education system to train the next generation of engineers and scientists.
4/6/2006 1:13:05 PM
^ Oh noes, we're only getting paid $80,000 a year!
4/6/2006 3:19:20 PM
Lou Dobbs is creaming his pants right now.And probably having an aneurysm on live television.
4/6/2006 3:23:40 PM
^^Maybe for a selected few. A few years ago Stanford was only paying entry level biology postdocs 26K and I think the average postdoc salary is still in the 30-35K range. Other fields do a bit better. But it is pretty shitty pay for ten years of post-secondary education and the amount of work that went into that education.Sure, get a faculty position or work for a company and you can make good money with a science Phd. But for a lot of people this doesn't happen until you're well into your thirties or pushing fourty. Meanwhile you have squandered 15-20 years of your life earning a wage probably well below your ability. The point is that becoming a scientist is, from a financial standpoint, a crappy idea if you're an american citizen while still a good enough one to attract foreign scientists to this country.
4/6/2006 3:56:22 PM
4/6/2006 4:26:19 PM
As a professor of biology?You're a true renaissance man, TGD. I didn't even know you were into the natural sciences.
4/6/2006 4:33:20 PM
^no, in a profession that overall pays less across-the-boardfind me an uneducated few-years of experience paralegal making more than damn near any professor in any field...[Edited on April 6, 2006 at 5:29 PM. Reason : ---]
4/6/2006 5:29:23 PM
Tenured professors, sure. But assistant professors? Associate professors?I don't think it'd be that hard. Check out salary.com on what the average assistant professor (<2yrs exp.) or associate professor (2yrs<, >5yrs exp) makes.
4/6/2006 5:33:35 PM
Well, 27K as miniminum entry level postdoc so my memory doesn't serve me so well. Still, bio postdocs can expect to make only 30-35K at Stanford: http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2001/march14/postdocs.htmlThis article is 2001 but postdoc pay levels haven't improved that much over the last few years. In my field, physics, I think one generally sees postdocs in the 35-45K range right now. Current statistics are hard to find but this article pegs the average postdoc salary at 38K:http://insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/06/postdocsNoting:
4/6/2006 5:58:25 PM
^damn, now that's fucked up.I guess the easiest way to fix the problem though would be to import a bunch of Asian or Hispanic lawyers, lobbyists & politicians -- we could all be poor together
4/6/2006 6:01:07 PM
postdocs get terrible pay but have pretty much total intellectual freedom. i'm going to be paid about as much going to grad school in an area they're trying to attract people to than i will as a postdoc.you don't go into science for money. sure, in 10-15 years you can easily make $100k+ as a PI but it's a long (but rewarding) road.[Edited on April 6, 2006 at 6:03 PM. Reason : .]
4/6/2006 6:01:52 PM