LLM in Tax to increase chances at biglaw?
Posted: Tue Mar 15, 2011 9:58 am
Would like to hear pros and cons.
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No. There are things you learn in tax LLM programs that you don't learn in traditional law school tax courses.EdmundBurke23 wrote:0L here -
aren't tax LLMs only useful if you already have several years of experience?
based on what i've read, i sort of got the vibe that tax LLM is tax lawyer's equivalent of MBA.
Thanks for your input! Why are the mid-size firms you mentioned looking for tax lawyers? Basically, why are they such a hot commodity? Is it because there are so few or because they are the only ones that understand tax law or?Aberzombie1892 wrote:No. There are things you learn in tax LLM programs that you don't learn in traditional law school tax courses.EdmundBurke23 wrote:0L here -
aren't tax LLMs only useful if you already have several years of experience?
based on what i've read, i sort of got the vibe that tax LLM is tax lawyer's equivalent of MBA.
OP - if you want to the top 3 tax LLM programs, your chances of big law would go up slightly. However, your chances of employment in general would go up a significant extent. Many mid-size and smaller firms are looking for people with LLM's in taxation. If you have a decent employment offer at graduation, getting and LLM in tax may not get you a "better" employment offer afterward. However, if you do not have decent employment at graduation, the LLM would increase your chances at decent employment.
My preconceived notions about LLM programs lead me to agree with you. Anyone currently in or from a non T5 LLM program want to chime in and tell us otherwise?G. T. L. Rev. wrote:The long and short of the chart, IIRC, is that unless you are going to a top 3 (maybe top 5?) program, there isn't much of an employment boost.
lol guess this sums it up for usAlex-Trof wrote:
But was it an LLM? I think the idea here is that an LLM is a large additional expense that is almost always unnecessary except in very few circumstances (top LLM in a certain program).taxguy wrote:I attended Miami, taking a lot of tax courses
Depends on the school I suppose. At GULC, JDs could take LLM classes, and almost all the classes other than entry level ones were cross listed. Schools without much of a tax program tended to have less overlap. In general, people who took courses entitled "business tax" as opposed to courses entitled "Corporate Tax I" or "Partnership Tax" tended to get classes that were more geared towards people who did not intend to become tax lawyers.No. There are things you learn in tax LLM programs that you don't learn in traditional law school tax courses.
Sort of. It's not an experience mandatory thing like an MBA, but the credited way to get an LLM is to have your firm pay for it. I was a definite oddity for coming to my firm with an LLM.based on what i've read, i sort of got the vibe that tax LLM is tax lawyer's equivalent of MBA.
There can be overlap, but there can also be drastic differences. As a tax lawyer (at least in biglaw), you will almost never crunch numbers. You also won't prepare returns.I am curious though what tax law entails. How does it differ from say, being a CPA? I'm genuinely curious, not trolling.
I suppose, but I would assume people looking into an LLM program would have at least some proclivities towards the practice area.First, no one seems to be asking the right question since everyone is very employment oriented. The real question is, " Will you like doing tax work?"
Didn't you attend over 10 years ago? The market is completely different today. You also probably paid a small fraction of today's tuition costs. Besides, the OP asked about LLM programs for biglaw. Very few biglaw tax lawyers have LLMs from non top-3 programs.As for only going to the top 3, that is rediculous. I attended Miami, taking a lot of tax courses, which I think was rated number 4 or 5, and I never had problems geting a job.
If there are jerbs I'll do it...I just want a jerb...any jerb that pays OK...BeautifulSW wrote:nealric is right about this. Go check out http://www.taxtalent.com and see what people are saying about the market for entry level LL.M. tax lawyers. And tax really IS different even if you don't end up crunching numbers in a B4 accounting firm. Most lawyers really don't like tax. Sometimes I wonder if they're afraid of it.
+1ArthurDigbySellers wrote:If there are jerbs I'll do it...I just want a jerb...any jerb that pays OK...BeautifulSW wrote:nealric is right about this. Go check out http://www.taxtalent.com and see what people are saying about the market for entry level LL.M. tax lawyers. And tax really IS different even if you don't end up crunching numbers in a B4 accounting firm. Most lawyers really don't like tax. Sometimes I wonder if they're afraid of it.