Lawyer Salary - Page 522 - Salary.sg Forums
Salary.sg Forums  

Go Back   Salary.sg Forums > The Salary.sg Discussion Forums: > Income and Jobs

Income and Jobs Discuss jobs, career options and of course salaries




Lawyer Salary

Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #5211 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 01:57 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
If the job market in Singapore is very good I can see these being issues (but is the job market very good)?

Just don't get why so I see so many people worrying on a micro-level about hiring and firing in the same few Singapore firms, but not even considering casting their net a little wider.
That's because law graduates are by and large cut from the same cloth and think the same way. By-the-book, good at exams but not very bold, creative or imaginative. And always treading the same tried and tested path.

The local law students all mostly come from RI or HC. That's as cookie-cutter as you can get.

Those not smart enough to get into local law, usually from lower ranked JCs, but can pay their way overseas, aren't bright or hardworking enough to cut it.

The true visionaries, dreamers and mavericks have long cut their losses and run after graduating law school, or getting called or at most spending 1-2 years as a junior associate. Tan Min Liang is a prime example.

Reply With Quote
  #5212 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 02:30 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
That's because law graduates are by and large cut from the same cloth and think the same way. By-the-book, good at exams but not very bold, creative or imaginative. And always treading the same tried and tested path.

The local law students all mostly come from RI or HC. That's as cookie-cutter as you can get.

Those not smart enough to get into local law, usually from lower ranked JCs, but can pay their way overseas, aren't bright or hardworking enough to cut it.

The true visionaries, dreamers and mavericks have long cut their losses and run after graduating law school, or getting called or at most spending 1-2 years as a junior associate. Tan Min Liang is a prime example.
Those true visionaries, dreamers and mavericks you mentioned have no losses to cut in the first place because they hail from wealthy backgrounds. Anybody can be a visionary, dreamer or maverick when their capital is funded by their parents.

To them, studying law is like sampling food. If they don't like it, they can always try others. But how many associates possess this privilege? Those from humbler backgrounds are taking a huge gamble if they leave the legal profession, with a fragile safety net beneath them.

The claim that a law degree opens many doors is an exaggeration. Employers in other industries aren't going to be impressed with a Bachelor of Laws, what they seek is relevance. Unless the candidate has connections of course.

Reply With Quote
  #5213 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 03:12 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
...
The claim that a law degree opens many doors is an exaggeration. Employers in other industries aren't going to be impressed with a Bachelor of Laws, what they seek is relevance. Unless the candidate has connections of course.
This is very true. Don't trust what blatant lies school deans, professors or ministry mouthpiece tell you about law opening doors to any industry. Let's be honest, anybody with a decent IQ and good command of English can do anything a lawyer does and we there is nothing special about being a lawyer apart from holding that license.

Law firms know that the bulk of their trade don't require actual lawyers holding a PC, that's why junior lawyers and fresh graduates are shunned from the job market:
1. Experienced paralegals can do the same fee-generating work at half the pay
2. Foreign experienced lawyers from Malaysia and Philippines can do the same work as an "executive" or "consultant" at NQ salary
3. Ministries and stat board rarely hire junior lawyers
4. International firms rarely hire junior lawyers
5. Free/cheap labour from interns and trainees
6. Consulting firms can do transnational and regulatory work without needing lawyers

Reply With Quote
  #5214 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 03:13 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default -

Come on everyone, don’t be too stressed. Life is all about perspectives and there is no cookie cutter formula of how one’s career will play out. From years of practice, I have seen associates with FCH from the highest tier Uni who don’t do well and leave the practice for average salary jobs (i.e teaching). On the other hand, I have seen associates with a more diverse background who made it to partners at young age. My point is that just do your best, be humble and have the grit to pull it through. Also understand that there is no one way formula of how someone’s career will play out.

To all you youngsters out there, the world is your oyster. In the worst case scenario, just marry rich if you can.
Reply With Quote
  #5215 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 03:14 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
The claim that a law degree opens many doors is an exaggeration. Employers in other industries aren't going to be impressed with a Bachelor of Laws, what they seek is relevance. Unless the candidate has connections of course.
This is very true. Don't trust what blatant lies school deans, professors or ministry mouthpiece tell you about law opening doors to any industry. Let's be honest, anybody with a decent IQ and good command of English can do anything a lawyer does and we there is nothing special about being a lawyer apart from holding that license.

Law firms know that the bulk of their trade don't require actual lawyers holding a PC, that's why junior lawyers and fresh graduates are shunned from the job market:
1. Experienced paralegals can do the same fee-generating work at half the pay
2. Foreign experienced lawyers from Malaysia and Philippines can do the same work as an "executive" or "consultant" at NQ salary
3. Ministries and stat board rarely hire junior lawyers
4. International firms rarely hire junior lawyers
5. Free/cheap labour from interns and trainees
6. Consulting firms can do transnational and regulatory work without needing lawyers
Reply With Quote
  #5216 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 03:55 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"The post-pandemic world will be a good time to hire the brightest legal brains because there will be a glut of lawyers," Ms Yuen-Thio said.

Lol what?
Reply With Quote

  #5217 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 06:04 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
"The post-pandemic world will be a good time to hire the brightest legal brains because there will be a glut of lawyers," Ms Yuen-Thio said.

Lol what?
Good luck to their HR having to sieve through thousands of CVs from unemployed lawyers.

Any support group for those cannot find RLT/TC, cannot find NQ assoc job, retrenched lawyers?
Reply With Quote
  #5218 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 06:05 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
...
The claim that a law degree opens many doors is an exaggeration. Employers in other industries aren't going to be impressed with a Bachelor of Laws, what they seek is relevance. Unless the candidate has connections of course.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
...
The claim that a law degree opens many doors is an exaggeration. Employers in other industries aren't going to be impressed with a Bachelor of Laws, what they seek is relevance. Unless the candidate has connections of course.
This is very true. Don't trust what blatant lies school deans, professors or ministry mouthpiece tell you about law opening doors to any industry. Let's be honest, anybody with a decent IQ and good command of English can do anything a lawyer does and we there is nothing special about being a lawyer apart from holding that license.

Law firms know that the bulk of their trade don't require actual lawyers holding a PC, that's why junior lawyers and fresh graduates are shunned from the job market:
1. Experienced paralegals can do the same fee-generating work at half the pay
2. Foreign experienced lawyers from Malaysia and Philippines can do the same work as an "executive" or "consultant" at NQ salary
3. Ministries and stat board rarely hire junior lawyers
4. International firms rarely hire junior lawyers
5. Free/cheap labour from interns and trainees
6. Consulting firms can do transnational and regulatory work without needing lawyers
Reply With Quote
  #5219 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 06:06 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
...
The claim that a law degree opens many doors is an exaggeration. Employers in other industries aren't going to be impressed with a Bachelor of Laws, what they seek is relevance. Unless the candidate has connections of course.
Let's be honest, anybody with a decent IQ and good command of English can do anything a lawyer does and we there is nothing special about being a lawyer apart from holding that license. Law firms know that the bulk of their trade don't require actual lawyers holding a PC.

1. Experienced paralegals can do the same fee-generating work at half the pay
2. Foreign experienced lawyers from Malaysia and Philippines can do the same work as an "executive" or "consultant" at NQ salary
3. Ministries and stat board rarely hire junior lawyers
4. International firms rarely hire junior lawyers
5. Free/cheap labour from interns and trainees
6. Consulting firms can do transnational and regulatory work without needing lawyers
Reply With Quote
  #5220 (permalink)  
Old 06-05-2020, 08:25 PM
Unregistered
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
That's because law graduates are by and large cut from the same cloth and think the same way. By-the-book, good at exams but not very bold, creative or imaginative. And always treading the same tried and tested path.

The local law students all mostly come from RI or HC. That's as cookie-cutter as you can get.

Those not smart enough to get into local law, usually from lower ranked JCs, but can pay their way overseas, aren't bright or hardworking enough to cut it.

The true visionaries, dreamers and mavericks have long cut their losses and run after graduating law school, or getting called or at most spending 1-2 years as a junior associate. Tan Min Liang is a prime example.
The proportion is mostly right but there are also fellow RI or HC kids with 2.2s, whether they are bright or hardworking enough you be the judge
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Tags
advocate, law, lawyer, legal, solicitor

« Previous Thread | Next Thread »

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
From Lawyer Insider: Life is Glamorous but Unsatisfying Salary.sg Income and Jobs 31 15-01-2018 12:40 PM

» 30 Recent Threads
DSTA (under Mindef) ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
1,555 Replies, 1,418,476 Views
CSA (Cyber Security Agency) ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
918 Replies, 535,730 Views
GovTech ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
6,339 Replies, 2,408,294 Views
HTX (Home Team Science and... ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
851 Replies, 403,395 Views
Career as Teacher ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
11,275 Replies, 6,912,654 Views
MAS for Mid Career Professionals ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
2,121 Replies, 1,104,723 Views
Roles in accenture singapore ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
7,745 Replies, 2,426,395 Views
Work in SMU ( 1 2 3)
20 Replies, 5,866 Views
Compare civil service salary ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
16,455 Replies, 12,665,051 Views
ST Electronics ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
3,831 Replies, 1,595,564 Views
Q: Big4 - Yearly salary increment ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
16,330 Replies, 5,167,657 Views
NCS (SingTel subsidiary) ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
1,359 Replies, 1,177,921 Views
How is life as a doctor in... ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
7,390 Replies, 3,498,952 Views
Hospital (Private or Public)... ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
763 Replies, 436,169 Views
Work culture in IHiS ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
729 Replies, 561,285 Views
MINDEF DXO (All FAQ on it) ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
5,925 Replies, 4,765,160 Views
Aircraft Maintenance License and... ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
723 Replies, 725,909 Views
DBS tech seed programme ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
3,772 Replies, 1,529,906 Views
Lawyer Salary ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
21,207 Replies, 10,545,683 Views
Need advice (UniSIM business...
3 Replies, 5,266 Views
2nd Upper from NTU Business...
8 Replies, 2,739 Views
Factual Local Bank Salaries - DBS... ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
1,848 Replies, 1,469,507 Views
Working Culture in IRAS ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
78 Replies, 171,470 Views
Civil Svc/ Statboard - Typical... ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
6,180 Replies, 3,838,616 Views
Banks' Pay and Bonuses ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
559 Replies, 510,984 Views
Project management
4 Replies, 3,550 Views
Far East Organisation
0 Replies, 115 Views
LTA (Land Transport Authority) ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
781 Replies, 427,080 Views
ITE Polytechnic Scheme ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
336 Replies, 385,266 Views
Job Application with MOE... ( 1 2 3... Last Page)
494 Replies, 646,081 Views
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.2.2



All times are GMT +8. The time now is 03:12 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.3.2