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What Utahns earn: Analysis of wages shows education pays off usually
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Oh and quit whining, that will help the rest of us.
Makes me wonder how inaccurate other numbers might be.
Yeah Right!
Humanitarians make a difference....Anesthesiologists gas people so surgeons can operate.
It appears that the methodology behind the numbers is highly flawed.
Sounds like Utah may not be the place to pay off the debt, however...
Whatever! You all do it for the money. Quit being such a martyr.
If it didn't pay so well, you wouldn't do it.
Is lying part of the Hippocratic oath?
Also, the statement about some medical students accruing only $60,000 in debt during the education seems to be a gross underestimate. That may have been the case with students finishing 10 years ago. Of the 50 residents in my program, no one has less than $100,000 in school debt from medical school alone, and several are nearly $300,000 in debt due to medical school. The big determining factor is whether the medical school was state funded or private. With the discrepancy between the earning potential and the debt rate of medical students makes me question the validity of the numbers reported.
One of the great things about getting an education is it opens up windows of opportunity for obtaining employment a person enjoys. If a person is working in a field they enjoy and living within their means, they should be able to keep out of financial trouble. It might mean their spouse has to work, but in today's economy the majority of spouses do. An education, which hopefully is a life-long pursuit, also makes life more interesting.
What a person is paid basically comes down to supply and demand. I am not advocating that employers should not pay a fair salary or wage to their employees, as doing so will only work to the employer's detriment, but those wanting to get paid more for what they do can move to places where their skills and abilities are in greater demand.
Just a few thoughts on the subject. I welcome other points of view.
I understand what you mean, but if you are looking for a house in draper that is a 4 bdr, 2.5 bath house , I think I have the most reasonably priced house in one of the nicest neighborhoods in draper. Let me know if you want any info.
My family made just-under $100k this year�we have very little credit card debt, but we do have 4 kids. My wife drives a 6-year-old-mini-van�I drive a 2007 Prius�for the gas milleage and great warranty�and I have a 45 minute one-way commute. We own a time share�have great vacations�go visit relatives out-of-state�have the requisite 3 tvs, Wii, DVD player, computer, internet, satellite, etc. We live in a 4500 sq foot home in a nice, clean, safe neighborhood with kids the age of my kids....those above say a "modest" home...that is defined ENTIRELY on where you live. If you want to live on the east bench�well good luck.
Life is about choices. Enjoy what you have�don�t waste your life complaining about what you don�t have. If you don�t like it�make smarter choices...but stop whining...we don't wanna hear it.
The other thing is that people are way over their heads in credit card debt. I work as a financial adviser and the things people do just blow me away. Eventually, things catch up with people, and many are losing their homes right now, especially the sub-prime borrowers and those with heavy credit card debt.
On the George Bush student loan rates have skyrocketed from 4.7 to 6.8. Medical tuition here in the great red state of Utah has gone up by $2,000 dollars every year I've been here, undergraduate education as seen similar, but less extreme jumps in price. Check out the College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007 signed into law by Mr. Bush, which no longer allows resident physicians to defer repayment of astronomical student loans while getting paid beans through residency. Also the US Dept. of Health and Human services, headed by local darling Mike Leavitt, has proposed striping funding to public hospitals, in Utah that means the U. The cost of educating new physicians (of which this country is in dire need thanks to an aging population) will indirectly fall on already straped patients.
All this in an attempt to curtail government spending- how bout we take care of Americans first, and then Iraq?
Do your homework GOP Larry.
I'm worried that someone in Minnesota will have the wrong leg operated on because her surgeon misread the instructions.
The main reason doctors make so much money is that there are not enough people willing to go through the pain of college, medical school, and residency. If everyone and their brother wanted to do that, then we would have more doctors than are needed and their salaries would drop.
A big problem is that everyone assumes that all doctors are rich. While it is true that good doctors who work incredibly hard will earn enough to eventually pay off all their student loans and have a good lifestyle, it is a farce to assume that every doctor is instantly rich the minute he/she hangs up their shingle (i.e. starts a practice).
Our current tax code assumes this and takes half of everything the doctor makes even though it will take him/her ten years or more to catch up with all their friends who got regular jobs out of college instead of going on to medical school.
If you're really making 100k and can't afford a house payment anywhere in Utah, you should be talking to a financial counselor.
The basic tenet of economics is supplying your unlimited wants and needs with limited resources. This is a challenge no doubt. Most of us could do without as big a home as we want or the bling bling rims on our monster trucks (most of which have never seen dirt) that are on every street in Utah. I see a lot of wasteful spending and I find myself, at times, not paying attention to my spending like I should. We can all point our fingers at each other and be pretty accurate.
I live in Utah, not because of the economics, but because it is where I want to live. I have a modest income and a great job that I love doing. Most importantly my family is close and I find my greatest joy when I'm with them.
You are not going back to Utah to practice.
You are not going to Nevada to practice.
1200 or more a day maybe in a clinic situation where the fees are 1/2 the standard, the treatment is 1/2 the standard, etc. Private practice for you fellows is becoming extinct, unless you plan on buying a practice. That $250,000 you now carry before you ever see a patient, will become over 1 Million before you practice for one year. Have you noticed it costs a million to simply equip an office and hang up a shingle? Good luck. Oh, and don't forget to tell your patients that the retainer you paid 30 dollars for, you are charging 175.00 for. Or that wonderful vacume formed retainer cost you less than 2 dollars and will last less than 6 months and you still get 175.00.
There is something wrong when a person with a master's degree earns below the national average!
Hate to break it but about half of the people earn below average.
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