Submitted by jdeeebs t3_11a82uc in washingtondc
rlpw t1_j9r30wj wrote
Reply to comment by marshalgivens in People in DC with a Master's degree make less than the average DC salary? by jdeeebs
Cries in PhD đđđ
CrossplayQuentin t1_j9rbv4l wrote
Preach. I have a PhD in arguably the most in-demand field of my branch, and after 6 years at Georgetown I'm barely cracking 60k.
NoIdeaHalp t1_j9s8yi1 wrote
Seriously? Are you full time or an adjunct?
CrossplayQuentin t1_j9tj62l wrote
Full time baby. đ
NoIdeaHalp t1_j9tzslf wrote
Iâd wager theyâre underpaying you. Boo.
CrossplayQuentin t1_j9tzw4k wrote
Oh 100%. I'm working on getting out.
NoIdeaHalp t1_j9vfoqk wrote
Whatâs plan B once you get out considering you have a doctorate. Genuinely curious.
CrossplayQuentin t1_j9vge4b wrote
Doing the same thing somewhere else. Salary compression means that just by moving institutions I can probably get a pretty good bump. I could do even better by going into Ed tech or corporate writing gigs but unfortunately I actually like teaching college.
ehenning1537 t1_j9uu3w2 wrote
Yeah, I bartend 4 nights a week and I really shouldnât be out-earning you guys.
rlpw t1_j9s0b4z wrote
Sigh all the feds and military folks getting the DLS degree at SCS to advance/promote. Georgetown has a few other PhD and masters tracks that donât require extensive research for folks in gov/mil.
Kief- t1_j9sdqtz wrote
PhDs (especially quant or STEM) are not appropriate comparisons to masters or average salary in DC. Those who want tenure-track professor positions choose to accept low compensation (~90-110k). But they have industry jobs as an outside option if and whenever they want to leave. The current market rate for PhDs with no work experience is 200-250k and many employers offer 6-figure signing bonuses in finance, consulting, pharma, tech (well, maybe not tech at the moment). Government pay is somewhere in between, and those positions generally start at GS-13. If you want to become a professor money probably isnât the reason you got a PhD anyway.
FennelSuperb7633 t1_j9tl5d7 wrote
Thatâs not necessarily true. Business school professors make a ton of money. I donât know about STEM fields. I would bet a starting salary for a tenure-track political science professor is $120K+ in DC, not bad either.
Kief- t1_j9tpe6w wrote
Of course, Iâm sure 120k+ AP starting positions exist. I didnât say AP positions are strictly in the 90-110k range. Thatâs the ballpark and you can find observation points above and below that range.
My point was that PhDs often choose a lower comp even when outside option is available, which is a different situation from masterâs. E.g. Business professors with 180k+ salary can find higher paying positions in industry if they wanted to leave academia. So wouldnât you agree masters vs PhD salaries are not comparable because of the selection bias?
Medievalismist t1_j9ucp7c wrote
Humanities PhD over here screaming into a bag.
rlpw t1_j9urs5w wrote
My PhD is in a social science. I knew what the prospects were going in sorta. I say sorta because the choice to get a PhD wasnât entirely based on the job market - it was based on actual interest and I knew I wasnât going to be paying for it. But itâs still a bit disappointing when going about looking for work or seeing these salaries.
I saw a few positions targeting just masters level experience and explicitly stated they wonât hire a PhD. At the same time I saw phds hiding their phds to get work. đ©
Medievalismist t1_j9uzpf9 wrote
I graduated the year after the 2008 crisis. When I went in to the PhD there was still the fantasy that if you did well and worked hard, you could get an academic job. Not only did that evaporate, but they kept evaporating with fewer and fewer and fewer every year since.
Feeling the same as you, where a PhD is either a curiosity that nobody cares about, or is seen as an active hindrance to getting a job. I hate it so much.
rlpw t1_j9v4py1 wrote
The commenter above mentioned STEM PhD industry salaries are like 200k. Perhaps specific stem fields although most folks donât consider social science a stem field despite science being in the name. Also the titles of positions can be confusing and arbitrary - ie a âresearch associateâ for some organizations require a PhD while others require at least a bachelors.
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