HappySqurriel said:
There is some truth to claiming that working harder doesn't (necessarily) make you better off in the long run, and the reason for this is that some people work really hard towards achieving something which has a very low chance of providing much of a reward. An example of this can be seen at most Colleges/Universities in the degree paths that most students choose ... As an employee your earning potential is determined by the combination of how many people are qualified to do your job, how many similar positions are available, and how many people would want to do that job. What this means is that degree feilds that produce a similar number of graduates to the number of industry and academic positions available (like engineering and computer science) have moderate wages and steady employment, those that produce less graduates than the number of industry and academic positions available (medicine) have high wages and constant employment, and those that produce a lot more graduates than the number of industry and academic positions available (humanities, social sciences and fine arts) have low wages and high unemployment/underemployment. It doesn't matter how hard you worked if you decided to get a degree where there was only 1 industry/academic position available for your 100 person graduating class and you're the second best student ...
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I think if your getting a degree, your working in the right direction. The people who work harder and don't get anywhere, are the factory workers that pick up another shift, or the cleaning lady that gets a job at a fast food place in the evenings.
Working harder means working full time and spending 20 hours a week doing something to move you into a better paying job. Not just doing your job harder.







