Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dad was a government lawyer who did well but obviously not big law well. However, he was home for dinner at 6:30 every night, did not work weekends, and enjoyed a healthy work-life balance. He retired with a full pension (yes, this was a different era) and enjoyed great health care. Seemed like a pretty nice deal to me.
As a gov lawyer, I appreciate you sharing this hindsight perspective. If I stay in the government, my kids won't go to private K-8 and I won't be able to leave them an 8-fig trust fund so that they'll never have to think about money. But frankly, never having to think about money makes people detached from reality and unrelatable. I should still be able to support my kids in the important ways -- giving them a comfortable middle-class life; rich life experiences; getting them through college debt-free.
Anonymous wrote:Finreg. 250k. Work an hour or two per week.
Anonymous wrote:Dad was a government lawyer who did well but obviously not big law well. However, he was home for dinner at 6:30 every night, did not work weekends, and enjoyed a healthy work-life balance. He retired with a full pension (yes, this was a different era) and enjoyed great health care. Seemed like a pretty nice deal to me.
Anonymous wrote:Dad was a government lawyer who did well but obviously not big law well. However, he was home for dinner at 6:30 every night, did not work weekends, and enjoyed a healthy work-life balance. He retired with a full pension (yes, this was a different era) and enjoyed great health care. Seemed like a pretty nice deal to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really disheartening. T10 law school, 20 years experience in Big Law, in-house and small law. Can’t seem to break out of the $300’s (unless I go back to Big Law which I’m not doing.)
Why is this disheartening? This is simple math. Legal is a cost center everywhere other than law firms, so of course you have to go to a law firm for the big money.
Anonymous wrote:In house (pharma company). Total comp (salary + bonus + long term incentive) around $500k. Work on average 35-40 hours a week.
Anonymous wrote:GS-15, 12 years out of law school, $180k
Love the interesting work, smart colleagues, and work-life balance. I sometimes feel like I am not working hard enough, missing out on BigLaw money, and feel an urge to compete in the private sector. But in my heart of hearts, I know that would come with major trade-offs that I do not think my family would be happy about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In house and make 500k+ including stock grants and bonus, salary is mid-200ks. I also get my evenings and weekends, unlike BigLaw.
What level and industry? This seems quite good for in-house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GS15 starts at about 164k and hits about 192k. The most experienced gov lawyers, at least in my agency, are at GS15 (although some never are). I think I got my 15 around year 5.
I find it really bizarre that lawyers are GS 15 so quickly. Why is this? It seems arbitrary when others in different professions that could be making a lot of money in areas outside of government do not.