deletebeepbeepbeep
Well-known member
- May 12, 2009
- 21,794
15k for a job in London is a really poor wage whatever way you look at it but at least its a rung on the ladder for some poor SOB.
Depends on what they were studying.
That's before tax. Imagine what the take home is if you get 2p in the pound.
It works the other way as well. Employers are advertising jobs, that really can only be counted as unskilled, low grade work, as graduate jobs as they realise they can get very talented candidates on low wages.
What would you say was an acceptable wage level for someone who has spent 3+ years studying at University?
***Misleading thread title alert***
Let's give 4: a humanities subject (history, english, philosophy etc), a generic business degree, a media related degree (journalism, media studies etc) and a science degree (biology, biomedical science etc).
What would you say would be a fair starting salary for a graduate in these to expect?
At least they won't have to pay back their student loan on that salary, so there you go, a free university education for the person who gets that job.
A lot of students, not all, but a lot think that they are "entitled" to a decent job once they've finished their degrees and a lot of them have never even been employed...
Only if they are on that or a similar salary for 30 years!
Only if they are on that or a similar salary for 30 years!
Doubt they'll ever earn much more there!
Problem is higher wages and a decent job was what you get told will happen before you go to University. You go to University, you do your years of studying, you come out the other end with skills that can offer you good employment. It does take a bit of adjusting to realise that this isn't really the reality. This has just come from there being more graduates around, which in turn, has come from the Unversity system being expanded to the point that it is possible to get the entry grades to a degree despite having failed all the way through School and College.
I just think it is a fallacy to argue that ALL students come out of University expecting 30k plus jobs. I graduated last year from a good University in a humanities degree - not a single person from everyone I knew from University OR School has got a job that pays anywhere near 30k. Far from it. When you look through some of the salaries offered for these 'graduate' roles it just makes you wonder how people can afford to live if they haven't gone to University and got a degree to bump up their salary.