ASIAN AMERICAN
CAREER SUCCESS CENTER
Seven fields that attract disproportionate concentrations of the top Asian American graduates of leading universities.
by Wes Funabiki
Career Choices of Elite Asian American Grads
hat separates top graduates of elite universities from the rest? More career options. For Asian Americans, there was a time when the engineer/accountant/doctor stereotype contained more than a kernel of truth.
Investment Banking/Finance/Business Consulting
     If you've been wondering why Asian students comprise upwards of 40-65% of the MBA programs of top schools like Wharton, Columbia and Kellogg, just check out the compensation packages of brand new grads who opt for investment banking or consulting careers. Including salaries, signing bonuses and year-end bonuses, the average Columbia grad took home $157,000 last year. Those graduating from the other top 10 business schools fared nearly as well, with $136,000 for Wharton, $137,000 for the University of Chicago, $134,000 for Dartmouth's Tuck School and $123,000 for Michigan.Surgery/Anesthesiology
     Masters of deferred gratification still flock to the more prestigeous specialties of the medical profession — even knowing that the price of entry is four years of college, four years of med school and 3-7 years of internship and residency. Those who survive the gauntlet reap what may be the biggest reward of all — bragging rights for long-suffering parents.Engineering/Computer Sciences
     Brainy people with a practical bent are frequently drawn to engineering, the only field that offers respectable starting salaries and solid advancement prospects to those who escape schooling after a bachelor's degree. The economic benefits of getting a masters or a PhD are marginal. The median income of engineers with bachelor's degrees and less than a year of experience is $44,500, according to a 2004 survey by the National Society of Professional Engineers. It rises to only $50,000 for those with master's degrees and less than a year of experience, and $58,500 for those with.PhDs and one to two years of experience.| “Anesthesiologists, the profession's surprising financial stars, earn an average of $306,964, even more than general surgeons ($255,438) and OB/GYNs ($233,061).” |