Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by TuringNYC 3561 days ago
That is a great question -- but there are also other aspects to the problem -- human talent is one. Finance can extract rents from society, and it can also lure away promising PhDs, academics and many of the brightest with superior salaries (financed via rents extracted.) I'm not passing judgement on the workers here -- I was one, trapped in the system for 10+yrs with golden handcuffs and nothing to show my family on what I actually created.
2 comments

It's way too hard to have a career in research or even get into a decent PhD program at all for the "finance brain drain" to matter. Research salaries are low, the conditions are hit or miss and yet, somehow, a faculty job is one of the hardest positions to get. We can worry about that when mid-tier universities stop getting hundreds of resumes for tenure-track positions.

For now, the fact that technically minded people can have a backup plan that pays well is most definitely a feature, not a bug.

I had a professor who gave up a good job at Harvard because he was tired of losing his best students to investment banking. It wasn't a field in any way directly related to business or finance, but Harvard students are highly recruited into lucrative investment banking positions.