Finance as a career option
Finance is a popular career option amongst graduates from elite universities: with about 20% of Harvard, Princeton and Yale graduates getting jobs in the field. Tyler Cowen has suggested that people with high intelligence have a significant edge in the field.
Compensation
Salaries in investment banking, private equity and hedge funds can be very high:
- Careers in finance reports that somebody with ~5 years of experience at an investment bank typically makes ~$450K/year.
- In 2006, Richard Rusczyk at Art of Problem Solving [1] wrote "While it's not expected that you'll make a million dollars in year 5, neither is it impossible. If you're not making at least middle six-digits by year 6-8 as a quant in a hedge fund, then something has gone very wrong for you."
- Some of the most wealthy people in the world, such as George Soros (net worth $23 billion) and James Simons (net worth 11.7 billion) made their money in these fields.
Work-life balance
The high pay in investment banking should be viewed in the context of the grueling hours on the job. According to IBankingFAQ,
"Analysts can routinely expect to work 90-100 hours per week or even more. A typical work day during the week might be 10:00 am until 2:00 am. Analysts will also typically work both days on the weekend. During a particularly busy time [...] it is not uncommon for Analysts to work all night..."
According to a highly upvoted Quora response
"Your physical health will almost certainly suffer. The extent to which it suffers depends on how careful you are with your diet, whether you make time to exercise, how much sleep you get, and how well or poorly you deal with stress. Most people have at least partial burnouts."
The quotations are referring to the hours of work in entry level positions. We have not been able to find substantive information on number of hours that more senior employees work per week – our impression is that the number is smaller, but not dramatically so.
The number of hours per week that hedge fund employees work seems to be smaller. In 2006, Richard Rusczyk at Art of Problem Solving wrote "I would say the average work week at places like Shaw or Jane Street is closer to 55 hours, maybe lower (unless things have changed dramatically)." This is in consonance with what we've heard from another acquaintance who works at a hedge fund.
Job security
Job security in the more lucrative sectors of finance may be poor. Carl Shulman wrote
"While a physician will usually remain a physician throughout her career, lucrative jobs in investment banking and management consulting often come with “up or out” career paths. Either one is promoted “up,” with incomes growing exponentially, as one can see in these links for banks and consultancies, or one is fired “out” and must seek work at a lesser firm or leave the industry. Since most employees will not be around for very long, one must take into account one’s “exit options” in deciding whether to enter."
Social value
Actors in finance produce both social value and social disvalue, and it seems very difficult to make a general statement about whether the typical worker at an investment bank (for example) does more good or more harm. We give some relevant considerations below.
The correlation between income and social value
[[[Social value of work: income as a proxy || In general]], there's a correlation between income and social value.