>Doctors are not exactly suffering, at least not in this country.
>
>Just as well- was it Oscar wilde who advised thst you want your doctor to be rich? ;-)
>
>I think you would find their median income is the highest of any profession
>
>Usually the higher incidence of part-timers skews medical incomes down, and there are also issues like "bonuses" that are only seen in other industries... so I'd be more inclined to look toward lawyers, bankers and senior public company executives, football players ;-)
You're right about investment bankers for sure. Those folks are really hauling it down. Obscenely so IMO, but that's capitalism for you. The CEOs of top corporations also do extremely well. There are relatively few of them compared to most "professions" so that is also to be expected. The same for pro athletes. When you consider how many millions of American kids play sports, then how many play varsity in high school, then how many go on to play in college, then how many of those play professionally, we're talking about the tip of the tip of the tip of the iceberg. There are what, 2000 guys in the NFL? Of course they are well renumerated.
If you meant the other kind of football, I see a certain past-his-prime Englishman is headed for Los Angeles <g>. We've been down this road before and it isn't going to make soccer/football more than a niche sport in the U.S.
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