There's nothing in either of those articles I didn't know already, though I enjoyed the pisstaking in the first one. If anything, the Guardian one isn't that good. I pick on the part saying that there are plenty of alternative career paths for Science PhDs. But do those posts actually require a PhD? He misses the point that PhDs actually deter some real world employers.
Just supposing you do land a post-doc, you've an existence of short term contracts ahead of you until you achieve tenure. You cannot make long term plans and the financial situation does not help as regards mortgages and other long term expenses.
I note salaries seem to vary amongst posters. My first post-doc although the better position was poorly paid, however, at that stage it was enough whilst I sorted out my head post-PhD. My second post-doc was well paid, however, a one year contract and it being clear there was no future (personality issues - discussed to oblivion now) still meant forward planning financially was impossible.
Some academics have the attitude that PhDs are a way of having someone running a project with little financial risk (i.e. funding bodies or student self-funding) and post-docs can be offloaded at contract end if their face doesn't fit as there's plenty PhDs coming through to replace them. High supply for a small number of positions means the situaion isn't about to change anytime soon.
The way research "groups" are structured means the senior academic has alot of sway with little recourse if things go wrong and little censorship from the University hierachy. Whilst this may be okay if you have a good man manager, our personality academics can thus virtually do what they like.
There should be balance between PhD positions and what follows, however, the oversupply situation and lack of academic accountability mean the balance of power lies with the University and PhD candidate, or post-doc, is little more than a disposable publication machine.
Ian
I think if you're weighing up the employment/salary benefits of academia and PhDs, then they will fall short. The only real 'known' I would argue are trades, like plumbing and electricity. You want to make money? Become a tradie, the tradies here in Australia make a heap of money, a hell of a lot more than what an academic makes (but Australia has a very strong anti-intellectualism culture....).
It's a messed up system, Academia, absolutely. But it's really no different to what others are facing in industry and outside of Academia as chickpea has said. Everywhere has shifted to short term contracts, perm jobs are fading. My partner works in industry and his company has made redundant a heap of people. Because of his specialised IT skill set he hasn't been, but it's not a pleasant atmosphere.
The system will crumble. In the meantime, I would look into Industry roles if you're concerned about academic jobs. I know Ian (Mackam-Beefy) left Academia for industry, and others have done the same. I'm still in academia right now but I'm keeping my eye on what's needed of me for industry roles, in particular applied social research.
Congrats awsoci! That's really exciting… 3.5 years ago I finished my PhD and I was very happy that I achieved what I always dreamt! As for postdoc… I am not sure what fields you are working but in chemistry (my field) you really need a lab to work and unfortunately there are not many of them out there… so the university becomes one of the very few places that you can work… and unlike some social sciences (i.e. finance, economy, anthropology, etc) where you can just walk to a pub and make a very interesting conversation with locals, my field bores hell out of them so I usually hide the fact that I have a PhD! :)…. But I think the PhD and postdoc problem is also extended to down under (read the transcripts if you cannot open it):
Australian Postdocs in Asia - Part 1
@ awsoci
Of course a university is not the place to prepare you for industry. I meant that these things can often not be separated and one leads to another. For instance, tons of chemists and biologists end up in sales after their PhD. A position in which a bachelor degree would be more than sufficient. The reason why they nowadays demand a PhD is not that you need it but that there are so many PhDs. Why hire someone with a masters degree if you can have a PhD? As someone mentioned above, if you don't do the job then 20 other post docs waiting in line to take your place. This lowered the salaries over time and made the expertise cheap.
I'm not blaming universities for their mild interest in the industry sector because that should not be their concern. I'm blaming them for lying about perspectives and facilitating an oversupply of PhDs by creating more and more scholarships that are getting cheaper and cheaper. As a PhD student in the Netherlands I would start with 2100€ and would get 2700€ in my last year, while it is 1200€ in Germany for exactly the same job. Obviously some countries manage to restrict this a little bit by paying appropriate salaries. Of course PhD positions would get rarer, but that would probably not be the worst outcome.
I like your positive attitude but one always reads the same stuff "I learned so many things in my PhD, I will make my way". Everybody thinks like this, but obviously it is not true. These berklee students are not afraid that they won't work in academia but afraid that they just work nowhere (I mean of course field related. You can probably always work in retail or a diner ;) ).
But I probably agree with you that it gets worse in many job sectors at the moment :/
Many profs recruit masters and PhD students to justify their own existance in the system. It used to be that each prof produced a handful of PhD's thoroughout his/her career and publish few good papers every now and then when they really had somethings to publish. Nowadays things are a bit different with publish or perish culture, H-index, impact factors and RG scores, they are all trapped in their own rate race. I know some assistant or junior associate profs at third tier ranking universities in their early 40's that have already prouced 10-12 Phds and published 100+ journal papers... Most of the research they do is to reconfirm things that are already known.... There is not really much of discoveries happening these days....Most of the scientific research done these days are either corporate science or some intellactual masterbation...
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