What the Top 1% of Earners Majored In

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We got an interesting question from an academic adviser at a Texas university: could we tell what the top 1 percent of earners majored in?

The writer, sly dog, was probably trying to make a point, because he wrote from a biology department, and it turns out that biology majors make up nearly 7 percent of college graduates who live in households in the top 1 percent.

According to the Census Bureau's 2010 American Community Survey, the majors that give you the best chance of reaching the 1 percent are pre-med, economics, biochemistry, zoology and, yes, biology, in that order.

Below is a chart showing the majors most likely to get into the 1 percent (excluding majors held by fewer than 50,000 people in 2010 census data). The third column shows the percentage of degree holders with that major who make it into the 1 percent. The fourth column shows the percent of the 1 percent (among college grads) that hold that major. In other words, more than one in 10 people with a pre-med degree make it into the 1 percent, and about 1 in 100 of the 1 percenters with degrees majored in pre-med.

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Of course, choice of major is not the only way to increase your chances of reaching the 1 percent, if that is your goal. There is also the sector you choose.

A separate analysis of census data on occupations showed that one in eight lawyers, for example, are in the 1 percent -- unless they work for a Wall Street firm, when their chances increase to one in three. Among chief executives, fewer than one in five rank among the 1 percent, but their chances increase if the company produces medical supplies (one in four) or drugs (two in five). Hollywood writers? One in nine are 1 percenters. Television or radio writers? One in 14. Newspaper writers and editors? One in 62.


Undergraduate Degree / Total / % Who Are 1 Percenters / Share of All 1 Percenters
Health and Medical Preparatory Programs 142,345 11.8% 0.9%
Economics 1,237,863 8.2% 5.4%
Biochemical Sciences 193,769 7.2% 0.7%
Zoology 159,935 6.9% 0.6%
Biology 1,864,666 6.7% 6.6%
International Relations 146,781 6.7% 0.5%
Political Science and Government 1,427,224 6.2% 4.7%
Physiology 98,181 6.0% 0.3%
Art History and Criticism 137,357 5.9% 0.4%
Chemistry 780,783 5.7% 2.4%
Molecular Biology 64,951 5.6% 0.2%
Area, Ethnic and Civilization Studies 184,906 5.2% 0.5%
Finance 1,071,812 4.8% 2.7%
History 1,351,368 4.7% 3.3%
Business Economics 108,146 4.6% 0.3%
Miscellaneous Psychology 61,257 4.3% 0.1%
Philosophy and Religious Studies 448,095 4.3% 1.0%
Microbiology 147,954 4.2% 0.3%
Chemical Engineering 347,959 4.1% 0.8%
Physics 346,455 4.1% 0.7%
Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical Sciences and Administration 334,016 3.9% 0.7%
Accounting 2,296,601 3.9% 4.7%
Mathematics 840,137 3.9% 1.7%
English Language and Literature 1,938,988 3.8% 3.8%
Miscellaneous Biology 52,895 3.7% 0.1%

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Zoology:confused::confused:
 
Interesting. 2 things jump out at me:

1. My first thought is that they all probably have one thing in common which is hidden from this dataset. It's likely that these folks are NICHE inside these overarching majors. Take History for example? I know too many broke ass ppl who majored in History, however, if you land a good job, you will make BANK!:yes:

2. While they may have majored in these fields, how many of them are doing work directly related to their major. :confused: Biology? Likely. Mathematics? English Lang. and Lit.? Who knows what those ppl are actually doing for a living. They sure aren't teaching HS Math and English. :D

Kinda goes back to the old addage of do something others aren't willing/able to do.

PS: Kinda hating that I didn't see EE on there. Oh well. :angry:
 
Seems like a silly point the person was making... From glancing over numbers seems like a shitload of people majored in bio and we all know they're heading towards medicine somewhere... Same percentage of them 6% were in 1% and their huge numbers made up 6% of the 1%...

In other professions doesn't matter as much your major: Finance, manufacturing, management, consulting... so it's mish-mosh...

All I got from that is something we already know 1. Doctors get paid and 2. You HAVE TO major in biology to be a doctor...

One more thing, it's not just whats coming in, but what's going out... I wanna see the expenses of those 'earners' or how many years in school they gave up for that (God knows how many for med school)...

... Not sure what top 1% of 'earners' means... Most very wealth people are just getting interest/returns on investments (See Romney and other rich ass people) so they are no longer 'earners' they don't have 9-5s anymore... I would love to see what those guys' majors were--much more interesting, but i'm sure there'd be no correlation...
 
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