turtleface
Member
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- Apr 12, 2006
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- HSC
- 2004
I haven't taken much interest in this before, because I generally believe that graduate salaries mean nothing, and that it is what you earn in 5 and 10 years or so time that counts. Even so, I believe if we do compare average graduate salaries, they should be compared reasonably.
A lot of people on BoS, uni and also the media refers to the stats contained within the Graduate Careers Australia surveys a lot. Hence I always hear stuff like, "oh dentistry is the highest paid graduate job", and "pharmacy is the worst paid", as this is the survey that asserts this stuff.
(You can find the surveys here: http://www.graduatecareers.com.au/content/view/full/24)
But I think its not very good, some features of the surveys are totally bullcrap too.
What is wrong with them?
1. Firstly the categories are stupid. They are so aggregated it makes the information useless. Everyone knows that Investment Banking Analysts, and now Mining Engineers, are the highest paid graduates out of university, with some being paid in excess of $200,000. You'd struggle to find an investment banking analyst getting less than 80K too. That average will be much higher than Dentistry.
2. Probably the worst aspect of these surveys exists in relation to Pharmacy. Notice that in every survey next to Pharmacy there is always a "Pre-registration" label, e.g.:
The notes will explain that, and i quote:
I have no idea what the people who were doing this survey were on when they made this, but I suspect there may be an agenda behind this. Maybe the big Pharmacy companies are exerting some pressure to excuse the (dreadfully) low salaries of Pharmacy graduates. The "Pre-registration low salary" is no excuse for low salaries. As many of us know, Pharmacy is not the only field to require graduates to be registered.
Doctors need to be registered, yet you don't see the salary survey making excuses for their (higher) salaries. So too do Lawyers, Accountants, Financial Planners, Stockbrokers, Architects, Psychologists, pretty much everyone.
Yet these professions don't get this excuse:
3. This last point is not so much a mistake, but a limitation of the survey.
The average salary figures are affected by other factors. I quote:
Don't get me wrong I don't mean to bag Pharmacists, unfortunately they just happen to be the things that get screwed up.
Anyway, thats my rant, you probably think I have nothing better to do with my time (and you'd be right).
I think I'll get sick if I hear another reference to these stupid surveys.
A lot of people on BoS, uni and also the media refers to the stats contained within the Graduate Careers Australia surveys a lot. Hence I always hear stuff like, "oh dentistry is the highest paid graduate job", and "pharmacy is the worst paid", as this is the survey that asserts this stuff.
(You can find the surveys here: http://www.graduatecareers.com.au/content/view/full/24)
But I think its not very good, some features of the surveys are totally bullcrap too.
What is wrong with them?
1. Firstly the categories are stupid. They are so aggregated it makes the information useless. Everyone knows that Investment Banking Analysts, and now Mining Engineers, are the highest paid graduates out of university, with some being paid in excess of $200,000. You'd struggle to find an investment banking analyst getting less than 80K too. That average will be much higher than Dentistry.
2. Probably the worst aspect of these surveys exists in relation to Pharmacy. Notice that in every survey next to Pharmacy there is always a "Pre-registration" label, e.g.:
Pharmacy (pre-registration)
OH GEE!! WHAT A REVELATION! OF COURSE GRADUATE SALARIES ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF EARNINGS OVER TIME! The problem of this sentence, besides stating the blinding obvious, is that the survey makes the statement ONLY in relation to Pharmacy.Care should be taken with salary interpretations for pharmacy graduates as
these are affected by registration requirements and are not indicative of
earnings over time.
I have no idea what the people who were doing this survey were on when they made this, but I suspect there may be an agenda behind this. Maybe the big Pharmacy companies are exerting some pressure to excuse the (dreadfully) low salaries of Pharmacy graduates. The "Pre-registration low salary" is no excuse for low salaries. As many of us know, Pharmacy is not the only field to require graduates to be registered.
Doctors need to be registered, yet you don't see the salary survey making excuses for their (higher) salaries. So too do Lawyers, Accountants, Financial Planners, Stockbrokers, Architects, Psychologists, pretty much everyone.
Yet these professions don't get this excuse:
Nowhere do the surveys excuse the salaries for Doctors, Lawyers and Accountants etc. even though they too have to be registered too.Care should be taken with salary interpretations for pharmacy graduates as
these are affected by registration requirements and are not indicative of
earnings over time.
3. This last point is not so much a mistake, but a limitation of the survey.
The average salary figures are affected by other factors. I quote:
So it turns out we can't say that Med graduates get 55K or so and Pharmacists get only 30K or so, because med figures include overtime pay.The salary figures on this site include payments such as overtime and bonuses, so they often do not reflect base wage rates. For example, the salary for medical graduates is substantially increased by overtime payments. Therefore, an analysis of how salaries compare across fields of study should take hours worked and hourly salary rates into account.
Don't get me wrong I don't mean to bag Pharmacists, unfortunately they just happen to be the things that get screwed up.
Anyway, thats my rant, you probably think I have nothing better to do with my time (and you'd be right).
I think I'll get sick if I hear another reference to these stupid surveys.
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