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Why Do
Harvard Kids Head to Wall Street?
May 4, 2010
The
impression of the Ivy-to-Wall Street pipeline is that it’s all about
the money.
It’s
actually more that Wall Street has constructed a very intelligent
recruiting program that speaks to the anxieties of the students, and
makes them an offer that there’s almost no reason to refuse.
When I graduated from college, I had no interest in investment
banking or its close cousin, management consulting. I went to
McKinsey for reasons that were only slightly different than those of
the typical Ivy League undergrad; after getting a Ph.D. in history,
I discovered that I was unlikely to get a good academic job and was
pretty much unqualified for anything else, and McKinsey was one of
the few places that would hire me into a “good” job with no
discernible qualifications (other than academic pedigree). Now that
I’m at Yale Law School, where maybe 15% of students (my wild guess)
come in wanting to be corporate lawyers but 75% end up at corporate
law firms (first job after law school, not counting clerkships), I’m
seeing it again.
The typical Harvard undergraduate, like the typical Yale Law
Student, is someone who: (a) is very good at school; (b) has been
very successful by conventional standards for his entire life; (c)
has little or no experience of the “real world” outside of school or
school-like settings; (d) feels either the ambition or the duty to
have a positive impact on the world (not well defined); and (e) is
driven more by fear of not being a success than by a concrete desire
to do anything in particular. (Yes, I know this is a stereotype;
that’s why I said “typical.”) Their (our) decisions are motivated by
two main decision rules: (1) close down as few options as possible;
and (2) only do things that increase the possibility of future
overachievement. Money is far down the list; at this point in their
lives, if you asked them, many of these people would probably say
that they only need to be middle or upper-middle class, and assume
that they will be.
The recruiting processes of Wall Street firms (and consulting firms,
and corporate law firms) exploit these (faulty) decision rules
perfectly. The primary selling point of Goldman Sachs or McKinsey is
that it leaves open the possibility of future greatness. The main
pitch is, “Do this for two years, and afterward you can do anything
(like be treasury secretary).” The idea is that you will get some
kind of generic business training that equips you to do anything
(this in a society that assumes the private sector can do no wrong
and the public sector can do no right), and that you will get the
resume credentials and connections you need to go on and do whatever
you want. And to some extent it’s true, because these names look
good on your resume, and very few potential future employers will
wonder why you decided to go there. (Whether the training is good
for much other than being a banker or a consultant is another
question.)
The second selling point is that they make it easy. Yes, there is
competition for jobs at these firms. But the process is easy. They
come to campus and hold receptions with open bars. They tell you
when and how to apply. They provide interview coaching. They have
nice people who went to your school bond with you over the
recruiting period. If you get an offer, they find out what your
other options are and have partners call you to explain that those
are great options, but Goldman/McKinsey is better, and you can do
that other thing later, anyway. For people who don’t know how to get
a job in the open economy, and who have ended each phase of their
lives by taking the test to do the most prestigious thing possible
in the next phase, all of this comes naturally. (Graduate schools,
which also have well-defined recruiting processes, are the other big
path to take.) The fact that most companies don’t want new college
graduates makes it easier to go to one of the few that do.
The third selling point — not the top one, but it’s there — is the
money. Or, more accurately, the lifestyle. The glossy brochures
never say how much money you can make. But they make it clear that
you will be part of the well-dressed, well-fed, jet-setting elite.
When people walk into those offices, with fresh flowers and
all-glass walls and free food and modern technology everywhere, they
get seduced. Last summer one person wrote to my school’s email list
about how wonderful his office was, with its view of Central Park. I
mentioned this to an old friend who used to work at McKinsey, and he
said, “he fell for the office.*
The same factors are also largely true for top law school graduates,
although for them the money is more important. Law school costs
close to $200,000 for three years, and I believe the average
graduate has about $100,000 in debt. So another major inducement is
the idea that you will work at a corporate law firm for three or
four years, pay off your debt, and then go work for legal aid or the
U.S. attorney’s office.
But the other factors are also very important. If you go to Yale Law
School, it is simply easier to get a corporate firm job than any
other job. They all come to campus at the beginning of your second
year, most people can get a job simply by following the interview
process, you work there for one summer, and then you get an offer to
come back. Even if you don’t want to work at a firm, it makes
rational sense to do it for that summer to get the offer as Plan B.
By contrast, it’s hard to get a public interest job. Most public
interest organizations don’t have the money to hire a lot of people,
and many don’t want people right out of law school. So the usual
route is you have to apply for a competitive fellowship to work at a
public interest organization, and then you have to hope they’ll hire
you for good after that year. It’s hard. And that’s how Plan B
becomes Plan A. And besides, many prominent corporate lawyers have
gone on to important positions in Washington, so there is still the
possibility of future greatness.
When people leave law school with a lot of debt, they figure they’ll
get some good skills and good money at a top-tier firm before going
to save the world. But then you have a great apartment, more
responsibilities, kids. You start enjoying it. It’s not even all
material.
And I think it’s important to point out, that things happen very
quickly. Private equity firms were trying to recruit us in the first
year of my two-year training program. There’s this notion of the
accidental banker, people who get caught up in that world and get
more and more pay and find it harder to justify leaving. But the
cultural effect of all of this — and even with regulatory reform, we
need to think about that — is that a lot of people decide to
sacrifice much more time than they normally would because the money
is so good, and then they believe they deserve extremely high pay
because they’re giving up so much time. It’s not malicious. But
there are a lot of unhappy people who end up in that situation.
It’s just human nature. Your expenses grow to match your income. As
the decades pass and you realize that no, you’re not going to save
the world, the money becomes a more and more important part of the
justification. And when you have kids, you’re stuck; it’s much
easier to deprive yourself of money (and what it buys) than to
deprive your children of money.
More importantly, you internalize the rationalizations for the work
you are doing. It’s easier to think that underwriting new debt
offerings really is saving the world than to think that you are
underwriting new debt offerings, because of the money, instead of
saving the world. And this goes for many walks of life. It’s easier
for college professors to think that, by training the next
generation of young minds (or, even more improbably, writing papers
on esoteric subjects), they are changing the world than to think
that they are teaching and researching instead of changing the
world.
Sure, there are self-parodying, economically delusional,
psychotherapy-needing, despicable people on Wall Street, like this
one. But there are also a lot of people who went there because it
was easy and stayed because they decided they couldn’t afford not to
and talked themselves into it.
A college student asked me at a book talk what I thought about
undergraduates who go work on Wall Street. And individually, I have
nothing against them, although I do think they should do their best
to keep their expenses down so they will be able to switch careers
later. But as a system, it’s a bad thing that a small handful of
highly profitable firms are able to invest those profits into
skimming off some of the top students at American universities —
universities that, even if nominally private, are partially funded
by taxpayer money in the form of research grants and federal
subsidies for student loans –and absorbing them into the
banking-consulting-lawyering Borg.
* By the way, I think that even within the elite there is an inverse
correlation between pay and quality of office; the banks make the
most money and have the shabbiest offices, although that has been
changing recently.
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