Anonymous wrote:Two married fin reg lawyers make $500,000 to $600,000 per year if not more. How much more reasonable and predictable hours than private practice, do interesting and challenging legal work for the most part, and, assuming they have chosen their path according to their beliefs, have careers, dedicated to productive and positive public service. And a reasonable amount of time left in their lives for time with family, social lives, athletics, what have you. Also, the ones I knew do outside activities on community service boards and alike so use their skills for good public impact. I went a different direction, But I think it’s a really nice option for smart people wanting to do good while maintaining balance for a family, another activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s easy $. There’s no easier place to make 250k. After slogging from 9th grade thru biglaw to get to where I am, yeah I want to twiddle my thumbs for a quarter million. YMMV. -Double Ivy, at FinReg.
How do you make $250 in a govt job? I thought attorneys were hired on the GS scale.
Anonymous wrote:This explains it perfectly:
https://www.bcgsearch.com/podcasts/12790/What-Yale-Law-School-Teaches-About-How-To-Approach-Your-Legal-Career-That-No-Other-Law-School-Does/
Anonymous wrote:Finreg agencies have a higher pay scale. It’s the sweet life. Easy work given your expertise and great hours. I wish firms allowed you o only work 40 hour weeks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They learn the regs from rhe inside.
Not to mention the connections. Going from the SEC to private practice or Big Law to defend the bad people is pretty common. When wondering, money is almost always the answer.
Lawyers are mercenaries. They chase the dollars.
Anonymous wrote:They learn the regs from rhe inside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In private practice, they work 60-100 hours per week.
In the federal government, they work 0-40 hours per week.
It depends on what stage of life you're at or what you fundamentally want out of life.
Also, the practice of law, especially corporate law, doesn't require a very high IQ. If you look at the degrees earned by leaders in private practice, a lot of them went to bad schools.
It is not 0-40, more like 35-55, but still way better than private practice. Combination of interesting legal work plus work-life balance can't be beat.
Is FinReg “interesting legal work”?
I am in the camp with the ones I know used it to quickly become partners in private practice because they know all the people, practices and regs for their private sector clients.
Anonymous wrote:And maybe they believe in public service? I’ve got an AB and a JD from Ivy League schools and I went straight into the federal government. Not FinReg, because that doesn’t interest me, but still. Just because I got “fancy” degrees doesn’t mean I’m only about $.