How much can I be earning or have saved to still get FA?
Posted: Wed Jul 23, 2014 11:52 am
Hi all,
I was planning on going to law school next September but I have just been offered a very financially rewarding job.
Based on what people are earning at the firm at the moment, I could earn £30-40k year one, £60-100k year two, £150-250k year three, and £350-650k year four, depending on conditions in the market in any given year, before tax. This translates roughly to $51-68k year one, $102-170k year two, $255-425k year three, and $595k-1,105k year four assuming a 1:1.7 GDP/USD exchange rate.
I took the LSAT in February 2014 and did well, and I absolutely want to go to law school in order to pursue public interest work and eventually politics...so I'm not hugely money motivated, but the chance to take care of my family and my future financially in the next four years is an incredible opportunity. That gives me four or five years working before I haveto apply for law school in August 2017 or 2018 (if I'm going to use my good LSAT score).
Let's assume that I work for four years (it's a job that isn't very intellectually stimulating, so I'd like to get to law school sooner rather than later...but that fourth year is very valuable). My after tax earnings in the UK would be $40.8-40.8k (£30k is at 20 per cent, £40k is at 40 per cent) year one, $61.2-102k year two, $153-191k year three, and $327-608k year four.
Let's assume that I earn towards the bottom end of that scale for all four years, which is probably unrealistic given the short cyclical nature of market conditions in my industry. My total after tax earnings would be $582k (actually a little more because of the personal allowance, I think). If I saved 30-40 per cent of that amount, I would have savings of between $175k and $233K roughly.
With savings in that range, I doubt I would qualify for financial aid, especially considering my salary would be several hundred thousand a year. Is this correct?
So you may see my dilemma...if I commit to putting law school off for four years, and get unlucky in that the industry booms in only one year, say year two or three, I may come away with a large amount of savings, but those savings will be largely, if not entirely, wiped out by having to pay ~$200k for law school. If the market is strong in two of the last three years, or in year four, then I could have considerable savings left over even if I did pay for law school in full.
I could go to law school next year on financial aid, and probably get some aid to some great schools, because my family is not well off. Bear in mind that the job I would be doing is boring and does not get me any closer to my long term goal of public interest work and a political career. Also bear in mind that if I take the job, it's either for one or four years...there isn't much point in building up just enough savings by working two or three years to have them go towards law school instead of financial aid.
So what would you do? Go to law school and pursue your long term goals next year, but be a poor student who will have to take out loans for living, eating etc. (and also probably have to work part time, which could affect my performance in law school), or work for the next four years in a job you only see as a means to an end, with a considerable risk that you won't save that much more than the $200k you would need for law school. The market in my industry is rarely poor in back to back years, so if it boomed in years one and three, I would only have after-law-school savings of $15-75k...hardly a result I would be happy with after working in a boring job for four years. However, if the market boomed in years two or three and four, I could have after-law-school savings of ~$300k. I think I would be satisfied gaining professional experience over the next four years if I could pay for law school and have $100k in savings left over, but that isn't likely to happen if year four isn't a bullish market.
What would you do?
Talk about first world problems...
I was planning on going to law school next September but I have just been offered a very financially rewarding job.
Based on what people are earning at the firm at the moment, I could earn £30-40k year one, £60-100k year two, £150-250k year three, and £350-650k year four, depending on conditions in the market in any given year, before tax. This translates roughly to $51-68k year one, $102-170k year two, $255-425k year three, and $595k-1,105k year four assuming a 1:1.7 GDP/USD exchange rate.
I took the LSAT in February 2014 and did well, and I absolutely want to go to law school in order to pursue public interest work and eventually politics...so I'm not hugely money motivated, but the chance to take care of my family and my future financially in the next four years is an incredible opportunity. That gives me four or five years working before I haveto apply for law school in August 2017 or 2018 (if I'm going to use my good LSAT score).
Let's assume that I work for four years (it's a job that isn't very intellectually stimulating, so I'd like to get to law school sooner rather than later...but that fourth year is very valuable). My after tax earnings in the UK would be $40.8-40.8k (£30k is at 20 per cent, £40k is at 40 per cent) year one, $61.2-102k year two, $153-191k year three, and $327-608k year four.
Let's assume that I earn towards the bottom end of that scale for all four years, which is probably unrealistic given the short cyclical nature of market conditions in my industry. My total after tax earnings would be $582k (actually a little more because of the personal allowance, I think). If I saved 30-40 per cent of that amount, I would have savings of between $175k and $233K roughly.
With savings in that range, I doubt I would qualify for financial aid, especially considering my salary would be several hundred thousand a year. Is this correct?
So you may see my dilemma...if I commit to putting law school off for four years, and get unlucky in that the industry booms in only one year, say year two or three, I may come away with a large amount of savings, but those savings will be largely, if not entirely, wiped out by having to pay ~$200k for law school. If the market is strong in two of the last three years, or in year four, then I could have considerable savings left over even if I did pay for law school in full.
I could go to law school next year on financial aid, and probably get some aid to some great schools, because my family is not well off. Bear in mind that the job I would be doing is boring and does not get me any closer to my long term goal of public interest work and a political career. Also bear in mind that if I take the job, it's either for one or four years...there isn't much point in building up just enough savings by working two or three years to have them go towards law school instead of financial aid.
So what would you do? Go to law school and pursue your long term goals next year, but be a poor student who will have to take out loans for living, eating etc. (and also probably have to work part time, which could affect my performance in law school), or work for the next four years in a job you only see as a means to an end, with a considerable risk that you won't save that much more than the $200k you would need for law school. The market in my industry is rarely poor in back to back years, so if it boomed in years one and three, I would only have after-law-school savings of $15-75k...hardly a result I would be happy with after working in a boring job for four years. However, if the market boomed in years two or three and four, I could have after-law-school savings of ~$300k. I think I would be satisfied gaining professional experience over the next four years if I could pay for law school and have $100k in savings left over, but that isn't likely to happen if year four isn't a bullish market.
What would you do?
Talk about first world problems...