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True, although law firm associates pay and bonuses are through the roof these days - even at entry level. |
Do you appreciate what you have ? You need to get out more. I think that you would be surprised at how hard folks work for far less than a first year Biglaw attorney earns. |
+1000 |
Cornell University has an undergraduate business school. Undergraduate business is not "a sham". MIT, U Michigan, Penn-Wharton, Cornell-Dyson, Georgetown, NYU-Stern, USC, Virginia-McIntyre, Notre Dame, WashUStL, Penn State, Michigan State, Indiana-Kelley, and a few dozen more are excellent undergraduate business programs. If you think that undergrad business majors are a sham, what do you think of undergraduate majors in the humanities ? |
| Agree with PP. Study the humanities and learn to think critically and write. Then go to business or law school. Undergrad business degrees are just a good way to waste the 4 years of your life when you had access to all sorts of learning and basically came away with knowledge of boring subjects that will be replaced by software or AI anyway. |
Corporate law does not really deal with much law. A basic understanding of contracts, some securities. But a traditional corporate lawyer who does M&A is much more like a project manager. I guess you have to be able to read and implement merger statutes, but a clown could do it. |
Not everyone wants to go get a MBA for grad school because they studied poetry for undergrad and then couldn’t get a job. |
So? |
I am a corporate lawyer and I want my kids to be in finance. A good corporate law career does not allow you to retire in your 40s to a comfortable retirement with enough assets to produce high passive income. A good high end finance career can. |
This is wrong. So many great lawyers just ended up there because their philosophy degree or their english lit degree wasn't paying the bills. This is a good reason to go finance because you can't just fall into finance, you can fall into law. |
I'm a real estate lawyer and I agree with this too. I serve on nonprofit boards with ex private equity folks who are in their 40s and retired (after multi-million payouts on carried interest plans) and serve on nonprofit boards just for fun. |
Brilliantly accurate statement for so many... |
What internships have they secured? Its easier to become a big law attorney, at least as an associate, than to get into iBanking unless they have a connection. |
| Coming from a family of investment bankers and a lot of friends who are corporate lawyers, I would go with IB hands down. |