Cheung Kong salaries are bullshit. It's just for big time stars and top 5 rookies.
Salary expectation for finance this year
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Question: How much does salary change from one year to the next for the average AP? I'm not talking about jumps from AP to Associate or getting lured away to another university. What I mean is, in the first 5 years, do you get "raises"? If so, how much? 2% per year? 5%? etc?
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You are a loser, nobody cares about your math. Instead, a lot of idiots pay a lot of money to get stupid basic notions that can be understood in one sunday afternoon on the web. I have a good wage and hot pussies. Your are lonely and frustrated.
Good choice to get a math phd. No doubt.
Why do you get paid so much to run regressions and teach idiots?
why why why
PhD in Math -
I've received increases of about 2-3% per year
Question: How much does salary change from one year to the next for the average AP? I'm not talking about jumps from AP to Associate or getting lured away to another university. What I mean is, in the first 5 years, do you get "raises"? If so, how much? 2% per year? 5%? etc?
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This is discussed in a more recent thread: http://www.econjobrumors.com/topic/entry-level-salaries-at-b-schools/page/2
And I'm going to assume you were 01e9 from that discussion based on timing of related posts.
Basically, yes 40k is 2/9 of $180, but a common mistake is to think you get it forever or even the whole time you're a junior. It's often only the first 1-3 years, with the belief that the impending tenure clock in later years is sufficient motivation to induce summer research. I cannot tell you what compensation contracts look like beyond the junior level.
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top 30-40 B school: 0/3 teaching load, all undergrads, 180 + 2/9 for three years, 1/9 allocated competitively from year four on, annual increases in the 1-4% range (depending on college level increase and dept discretion), but we had two years without increases b/c of crisis, 3-10K a year in research fund (depending if I apply for easy to get internal grants)