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Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 4:03 pm
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https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=206850
Sorry, man, while everything else you say is hard to argue against, saying something like the quoted suggests that it would be hard to get your debtload under 200K after 2 years of NYC biglaw. If you get NYC Biglaw and paid sticker you should put at least 60K towards your debt, leaving the debtload closer to 100K than 200K - this could still be so even if you paid NYU/Columbia/NU sticker.romothesavior wrote:...Even if you land a 160k NYC biglaw job and you make $2,000-3,000 per month payments (which is a lot of money to set aside for student loan debt), it'll still take you a few years to even get your debtload under $200,000....
I have to disagree with you. Sticker at GULC and NU will be closer to $270-280k with COL, tuition increases and interest. So, even assuming you're living off of $35k/year after taxes and paying off loans (which is what it would be in NYC given the tax rates of $160k), you'd still be just under $200k in debt. To live that meagerly in NYC while still that much in debt for 2 years? You may be a huge advocate of T14 sticker, but this math should be what you're looking at. That debt load is daunting.WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:Sorry, man, while everything else you say is hard to argue against, saying something like the quoted suggests that it would be hard to get your debtload under 200K after 2 years of NYC biglaw. If you get NYC Biglaw and paid sticker you should put at least 60K towards your debt, leaving the debtload closer to 100K than 200K - this could still be so even if you paid NYU/Columbia/NU sticker.romothesavior wrote:...Even if you land a 160k NYC biglaw job and you make $2,000-3,000 per month payments (which is a lot of money to set aside for student loan debt), it'll still take you a few years to even get your debtload under $200,000....
I know I'm being nit-picky but putting it like you put it makes even biglaw sound like a horrible deal.
I really don't want to get a whole thing started again, just wanted to chime in and point this out.
You realize putting 30k a year towards your debt doesn't reduce your total debt 30k when you have 8% interest on 200k of principal right breh?WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:Sorry, man, while everything else you say is hard to argue against, saying something like the quoted suggests that it would be hard to get your debtload under 200K after 2 years of NYC biglaw. If you get NYC Biglaw and paid sticker you should put at least 60K towards your debt, leaving the debtload closer to 100K than 200K - this could still be so even if you paid NYU/Columbia/NU sticker.romothesavior wrote:...Even if you land a 160k NYC biglaw job and you make $2,000-3,000 per month payments (which is a lot of money to set aside for student loan debt), it'll still take you a few years to even get your debtload under $200,000....
I know I'm being nit-picky but putting it like you put it makes even biglaw sound like a horrible deal.
I really don't want to get a whole thing started again, just wanted to chime in and point this out.
I'm also trying not to make this a thing, but how would taxes work? I thought I heard an adcomm once mention that you wouldn't be part of the typical tax bracket with massive student loan debt, but I may have misheard him.WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:Sorry, man, while everything else you say is hard to argue against, saying something like the quoted suggests that it would be hard to get your debtload under 200K after 2 years of NYC biglaw. If you get NYC Biglaw and paid sticker you should put at least 60K towards your debt, leaving the debtload closer to 100K than 200K - this could still be so even if you paid NYU/Columbia/NU sticker.romothesavior wrote:...Even if you land a 160k NYC biglaw job and you make $2,000-3,000 per month payments (which is a lot of money to set aside for student loan debt), it'll still take you a few years to even get your debtload under $200,000....
I know I'm being nit-picky but putting it like you put it makes even biglaw sound like a horrible deal.
I really don't want to get a whole thing started again, just wanted to chime in and point this out.
After taxes you pocket 115,200. You can put 60 of that towards debt. If 270K debt at graduation, you'd be at 150 after two years. You can live in NYC on 55K a year.matthewsean85 wrote:I have to disagree with you. Sticker at GULC and NU will be closer to $270-280k with COL, tuition increases and interest. So, even assuming you're living off of $35k/year after taxes and paying off loans (which is what it would be in NYC given the tax rates of $160k), you'd still be just under $200k in debt. To live that meagerly in NYC while still that much in debt for 2 years? You may be a huge advocate of T14 sticker, but this math should be what you're looking at. That debt load is daunting.WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:Sorry, man, while everything else you say is hard to argue against, saying something like the quoted suggests that it would be hard to get your debtload under 200K after 2 years of NYC biglaw. If you get NYC Biglaw and paid sticker you should put at least 60K towards your debt, leaving the debtload closer to 100K than 200K - this could still be so even if you paid NYU/Columbia/NU sticker.romothesavior wrote:...Even if you land a 160k NYC biglaw job and you make $2,000-3,000 per month payments (which is a lot of money to set aside for student loan debt), it'll still take you a few years to even get your debtload under $200,000....
I know I'm being nit-picky but putting it like you put it makes even biglaw sound like a horrible deal.
I really don't want to get a whole thing started again, just wanted to chime in and point this out.
It's 95k you turd.WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:After taxes you pocket 115,200. You can put 60 of that towards debt. If 270K debt at graduation, you'd be at 150 after two years. You can live in NYC on 55K a year.matthewsean85 wrote:I have to disagree with you. Sticker at GULC and NU will be closer to $270-280k with COL, tuition increases and interest. So, even assuming you're living off of $35k/year after taxes and paying off loans (which is what it would be in NYC given the tax rates of $160k), you'd still be just under $200k in debt. To live that meagerly in NYC while still that much in debt for 2 years? You may be a huge advocate of T14 sticker, but this math should be what you're looking at. That debt load is daunting.WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:Sorry, man, while everything else you say is hard to argue against, saying something like the quoted suggests that it would be hard to get your debtload under 200K after 2 years of NYC biglaw. If you get NYC Biglaw and paid sticker you should put at least 60K towards your debt, leaving the debtload closer to 100K than 200K - this could still be so even if you paid NYU/Columbia/NU sticker.romothesavior wrote:...Even if you land a 160k NYC biglaw job and you make $2,000-3,000 per month payments (which is a lot of money to set aside for student loan debt), it'll still take you a few years to even get your debtload under $200,000....
I know I'm being nit-picky but putting it like you put it makes even biglaw sound like a horrible deal.
I really don't want to get a whole thing started again, just wanted to chime in and point this out.
All of this is assuming a unfavorable outcome. No 1L job; no 2L SA; that you only stay 2 years and not a little more (the word few suggest at least 2)
Like I said above:
I know I'm being nit-picky but putting it like you put it makes even biglaw sound like a horrible deal.
I do breh. But I also said 60K. Just look at the math above. OK, if 270 at beginning and you paid 120, you debt wouldn't be precisely 150. (165?) OK. Thanks for pointing that out brehRuxin1 wrote:You realize putting 30k a year towards your debt doesn't reduce your total debt 30k when you have 8% interest on 200k of principal right breh?WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:Sorry, man, while everything else you say is hard to argue against, saying something like the quoted suggests that it would be hard to get your debtload under 200K after 2 years of NYC biglaw. If you get NYC Biglaw and paid sticker you should put at least 60K towards your debt, leaving the debtload closer to 100K than 200K - this could still be so even if you paid NYU/Columbia/NU sticker.romothesavior wrote:...Even if you land a 160k NYC biglaw job and you make $2,000-3,000 per month payments (which is a lot of money to set aside for student loan debt), it'll still take you a few years to even get your debtload under $200,000....
I know I'm being nit-picky but putting it like you put it makes even biglaw sound like a horrible deal.
I really don't want to get a whole thing started again, just wanted to chime in and point this out.
160K is taxed down to 95K in NY?Ruxin1 wrote:you turd.
Between 95-100 yes.WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:160K is taxed down to 95K in NY?Ruxin1 wrote:you turd.
Yes, you did mis-hear.I thought I heard an adcomm once mention that you wouldn't be part of the typical tax bracket with massive student loan debt, but I may have misheard him.
Don't even put a potential transfer in your thought process at all. It's not only not a sure thing, it is HIGHLY unlikely. Wherever you decide to go assume you will end up at median after first year.jdmonkey wrote:Assuming I went to Wash U and transferred after 1L. I know that is no sure thing, but if that were to be the case, at what rank of law school would full sticker be worth it. Top 5? Top 10?
According to Regulus' spreadsheet, $60k a year only knocks you down to $198k after 2 years of biglaw:WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:I do breh. But I also said 60K. Just look at the math above. OK, if 270 at beginning and you paid 120, you debt wouldn't be precisely 150. (165?) OK. Thanks for pointing that out brehRuxin1 wrote:You realize putting 30k a year towards your debt doesn't reduce your total debt 30k when you have 8% interest on 200k of principal right breh?WhatOurBodiesAreFor wrote:Sorry, man, while everything else you say is hard to argue against, saying something like the quoted suggests that it would be hard to get your debtload under 200K after 2 years of NYC biglaw. If you get NYC Biglaw and paid sticker you should put at least 60K towards your debt, leaving the debtload closer to 100K than 200K - this could still be so even if you paid NYU/Columbia/NU sticker.romothesavior wrote:...Even if you land a 160k NYC biglaw job and you make $2,000-3,000 per month payments (which is a lot of money to set aside for student loan debt), it'll still take you a few years to even get your debtload under $200,000....
I know I'm being nit-picky but putting it like you put it makes even biglaw sound like a horrible deal.
I really don't want to get a whole thing started again, just wanted to chime in and point this out.
I agree with this.Birdnals wrote:Don't even put a potential transfer in your thought process at all. It's not only not a sure thing, it is HIGHLY unlikely. Wherever you decide to go assume you will end up at median after first year.jdmonkey wrote:Assuming I went to Wash U and transferred after 1L. I know that is no sure thing, but if that were to be the case, at what rank of law school would full sticker be worth it. Top 5? Top 10?
Latham is a pretty highly rated Vault firm that laid off a ton of people, a lot of it via stealth layoffs. Their behavior was pretty egregious, and their brand is now pretty much synonymous with deferrals and layoffs. It's become a verb now in the legal hiring vernacular.wannabelawstudent wrote:What does latham mean? Also, why do most people flame out of big law after a couple of years?
It's more that they laid off first years after they had only been at work for a couple months, thereby destroying careers and destroying hopes and dreamsromothesavior wrote:Latham is a pretty highly rated Vault firm that laid off a ton of people, a lot of it via stealth layoffs. Their behavior was pretty egregious, and their brand is now pretty much synonymous with deferrals and layoffs. It's become a verb now in the legal hiring vernacular.wannabelawstudent wrote:What does latham mean? Also, why do most people flame out of big law after a couple of years?
And some people don't like it, some people aren't cut out for it, some decide to lateral elsewhere for different opportunities, some people are terminated for any variety of reasons. Same with any job really. But turnover, especially at the truly big firms, is really, really high.