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by rayiner
5385 days ago
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Re: the "best and brightest" it's more at the undergraduate level then the PhD level. My brother has tippy-top grades in physics at one of Harvard/Yale/Princeton and legit research experience in nano-tech, and he like many of his friends in similar positions are choosing between going into industry or R&D and going into finance. The lure of $120k the first year out of school and guaranteed admission to a Harvard/Stanford/Wharton MBA is hard to compete with. A big part of the problem is systemic. The researcher that discovers new technology gets a nice $30k bonus. The owners of the capital get the millions of dollars resulting from that invention. So if you're a bright physics student in the US, why on earth would you pursue R&D? It is far more remunerative to work for those who own the capital figuring out new ways to move money around. |
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