There are a lot of factors that go into pay rates for programmers. However, typically I am seeing 40 - 60k starting salaries for Junior programmers, and senior programmers are making up to about 120k with 10 years experience.
On the other hand, a close in-law relative just graduated a masters nursing program in anesthesiology and makes about $160k/yr. She had to work hard to get through the program, but now she puts a needle in a surgery patient arm, turns on the gas, then watches a few gauges for the few hours the procedure lasts and goes home.
She showed me the typical coursework she had to complete which involved calculating rates of titration and half lifes of various medicines so you can gauge the rates at which to apply anesthesia during procedures. It's pretty much all just basic algebra applied to various medicines, backed up with some memorization of drug interactions.
I know I'm using a specific well-paid field as an example, but I did go into this profession to make money. Is everyone else out there just in it for the love of programming (I do enjoy my work) and is that the reason pay is relatively lower for what I currently see as more mentally challenging work? Am I just overestimating the amount of effort it takes to manage and develop software projects profitably relative to other professions?
I know programmers get stock options and nurses don't, but isn't the relatively small number of payouts on stock options overall worth less?
One thing I've noticed about the nursing field in particular though is this: there are far far fewer incompetent nurses than there are incompetent programmers. Nursing school does flunk out the "killer nurses". should we be flunking out the "failure programmers" to make our rates of pay higher?
