Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if this is top 1% of individual earners or all includes all adults in 1% households but it's interesting to see that engineering majors aren't more likely than English majors to be in it, while Finance majors aren't particularly well represented.
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/18/what-the-top-1-of-earners-majored-in/
Also interesting is the variation within the social sciences - political science and history majors are more likely to be in it than psych or sociology majors for instance.
They major in family money and connections. I'm serious. That's not a knock, necessarily. But, if you're very poor and have no connections or are the first to go to college, it's very hard (not impossible) to make it to the 1%. I speak from experience (and as someone who has done very well, though I doubt woudl be considered a 1%). I am successful but it was very, very hard. Grad school was full of people who had parent help and support, who had connections for jobs, etc. Everything came easy for them and they had family fall backs. I had nothing and you really need some grit to get past it.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if this is top 1% of individual earners or all includes all adults in 1% households but it's interesting to see that engineering majors aren't more likely than English majors to be in it, while Finance majors aren't particularly well represented.
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/18/what-the-top-1-of-earners-majored-in/
Also interesting is the variation within the social sciences - political science and history majors are more likely to be in it than psych or sociology majors for instance.
Anonymous wrote:Trustee, not trustie.
Anonymous wrote:Trustee, not trustie.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well I wonder how many of these 1%'ers come from a 1% family? I had friends in college who were rich. They could major in anything and when the graduated they went into the family business.
This is me. I am a trustie, so was in that category as soon as I turned 18.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are a 1% family. DH grew up in NE DC, went to DC schools in the 70s and 80s (and lived to tell about it) and was raised in public housing by a single mother. He majored in computer science at an average state university and got his masters degree in CS at night while working for the government afterwards.
I grew up upper middle class, taught school for 10 years, got a masters degree, stayed home to raise kids, did the volunteer thing and held board positions at non-profits. Can't get a job to save me life!
So your DH working in computer science is the entire reason you're a 1% family? I guess he no longer works for the government. I also earned a MSCS at night while working full time. I've done very well with my career. I'll never be poor but I'm nowhere near the 1%. I have to ask: Did he earn a lot of his wealth during the dot-com boom? I sure did but it still didn't put me in the 1%.
He left government after 4 years and worked during the Dot com boom at DoD contractors, then we moved west and he got a job at a publicity held company. Stock grants were a big part of his compensation. He left that job and due to his skills and competition for a certain skill set, he jumped jobs and got a tremendous signing offer (4 year payout) at a competitor. He basically sold his sole.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are a 1% family. DH grew up in NE DC, went to DC schools in the 70s and 80s (and lived to tell about it) and was raised in public housing by a single mother. He majored in computer science at an average state university and got his masters degree in CS at night while working for the government afterwards.
I grew up upper middle class, taught school for 10 years, got a masters degree, stayed home to raise kids, did the volunteer thing and held board positions at non-profits. Can't get a job to save me life!
So your DH working in computer science is the entire reason you're a 1% family? I guess he no longer works for the government. I also earned a MSCS at night while working full time. I've done very well with my career. I'll never be poor but I'm nowhere near the 1%. I have to ask: Did he earn a lot of his wealth during the dot-com boom? I sure did but it still didn't put me in the 1%.
Anonymous wrote:Well if you can't do well in philosophy classes, I wouldn't recommend it as a major at a non-elite institution.
Anonymous wrote:Some successful philosophy majors.
http://www.businessinsider.com/successful-philosophy-majors-2014-1?op=1