- Joined
- Feb 12, 2008
- Messages
- 28
- Reaction score
- 0
I saw the word 'wisconsin' in the OP's name, and I just stopped reading. 🙂
6.8% is a bit high most loan consolidations are at or below the rate of inflation (4%).
This is wrong.
I don't think that the FP avg. salary is that low. At least in the NYTimes article on dermatology that came out about a week ago they have a chart listing the average FP salary as $178,859, and the source is Medical Economics. So that's about another $40k that you need to correct for.
What is right then?
thats a BS number that comes from salary surveys that oversample high earning physicians due to reporting bias.
the "real" salary number is found in the US Census Data via the US Labor Department. Unlike salary surveys, there is no reporter bias because it pools everybody's data together automatically.
According to the USLD, the median physician earns about 165k. Thats across ALL specialties, so FPs are obviously lower.
Thanks for posting- that's a far more detailed and comprensive analysis. Even if it's on the high side, $58K in discretionary income with a 350K house, $40K worth of cars, $225 school debt, and a lazy wife that refuses to work, there's a lot of room to loose some of that 58K and still be very comfortable.Here's a 2006 scenario for a guy in Illinois.
$2,000/mon mortgage? Either your house is too expensive or your loan terms are awful....with 200K school debt a mortgage of $2,000/mon is a bad decision (IMO).
There's nothing wrong with a 130K house right out of medical school! >) Plus, who says you have to practice in a major city...and does Wisconsin even have "major cities?" 😉. Especially in a field like Family Medicine, I would image life would be much more enjoyable in a small to mid-sized city. If you're a plastic surgeon shooting for $500K+, you might not have much of a choice but to live in a big city and get a $1 million house, but then again, you can afford it.A 2,000/month mortgage is about a $300,000 house. My brother, is locked at 5.1% over 30 years (jumbo loan b/c it's an expensive house) pays $5,800/month. His house was purchased for ~$800,000 and he financed $650,000.
My parents house, is $130,000 and they pay $900/month.
Just to put things in perspective. Also, there's no way that you're getting a house, in a good neighborhood, in most major cities for $130,000. The reason my parents is that price is they bought it 20 years ago.
What credentials do you have to provide this analysis. It seems to me that it's over simplified, and others have mentioned some good points.![]()
Again here are the main points:
Highest tax bracket in the U.S. is taxed at 35%, if you make more than $350K a year
Your income is taxed in a tiered system, so only your income that falls within the certain bracket gets taxed at that rate.
For Example:
Your first $15,000 is taxed at 10%,
from $15,000 to $60,000 its taxed at 15%,
from $60,000 - $130,000 is taxed at 25%
from $130,000 - $195,000 is taxed at 28%
and on down the line
Interest payments on your student loans can be claimed in tax rebates
Also, you're not factoring in investments. Welcome to 2008, living paycheck to paycheck is for suckers, you have to save and invest.
Simply looking at the marginal federal income tax rates is incomplete.
For people with 6 figure incomes, a better rule of thumb is that roughly 50 cents of every earned dollar is taxed away if you include federal, state, and local income taxes, property taxes, social security contributions by the employee, capital gains taxes, and sales taxes.
Im taking a half-hour out of my time to make this post. Im here to help pre-meds really understand just how much of a burden student loan debt actually is as a practicing physician.
Close to 50% of doctors work in the area of FP. The average salary in the area of FP is $840,000. So I will be using these numbers from here on out.
Loan balance: $200,000
Interest rate: 6.8%
Loan term: 30 years
A word of caution ..$840k is going to seem like earning pennies when you read a real analysis of medical student debt.
40% of your $840k is going to go to taxes. This gives you $504,000 for the year.
Mortgage payment: this will vary from place to place. Im going to use $8,000 per month on your ridiculous mansion in the suburbs. You will spend $106,000 per year on your mortgage.
You are now down to $398,000 left over for the year.
Now you have property taxes. Im going to assume that you will need to pay around $12,000.
You are now down to $386,000 for the year.
Car payment: lets put down $1200 a month for that sweet new BMW convertible. Your wife or husband have a car? Good thing you got them that 10 year-old Tracker. Now you are close to $1250 a month.
Car insurance? $3,000 per year.
You are now down to $368,000
You need to pay back your student loans. With the above calculations, you will be paying $1,303.85 a month.
You are now down to $352,354.
Do you have house repairs, children, car expenses, food, gas, health insurance? Good luck affording all that stuff, sucker!
I don't understand the purpose of this thread.
This combined with your other thread on how engineers make more money than medicine or something like that makes it seem like you have some weird vendetta against the medical field and are trying to discourage others from applying to medical school.
Frankly, I'm confused.
Now, this is worst case scenerio with me. Chances are I'll get some scholarships, probably move back to Montana and practice in an underserved area, get raises, and deduct from my taxes more than I listed. With my math (correct me if I'm wrong), I will probably be ok with paying off my loans in less than six years.
Kraazy said:As a sidenote, this also means that if you're premed, you should start saving and minimizing debt as soon as possible. You'll be one step ahead if you minimize your debt from undergrad, and have some money put aside for the application process, living expenses during med school, and perhaps even begin saving for retirement.
That's silly. 6.8% may be cheap money, but it's still money that costs you every day you don't pay it off, and we're not talking about investing that money (e.g. margin investing), we're talking about putting off debt repayment and paying compounding interest in the interim. Plus, 16% is a MUCH higher yield than your typical investment account. So sure, if you can pull 16% you're still making a net of 9.2%, but even that's not right because you're loosing 6.8% on 200K, and making MAYBE 16% on whatever money you're able to contribute (which will not nearly be 200K for at least a couple of years worth of post-medical school investing). I'm a big proponent of investing, but paying down at least some of the $200K has to be a priority (at any interest rate).Also, are you planning on saving any money? Why would you want to pay off those loans so quickly? 6.8% interest is cheap money. Instead, use the money to do some investing. With dollar cost averaging (DCA) and a "throw-a-dart" philosophy on picking funds, I have been getting an annual return of roughly 16% over the last 8 years across my 401k, Roth, and taxable accounts. Essentially, at 16%, you are doubling your money every 5 years. If you DCA, the rate that your money grows is amazing. Had I tried to pay off my debt from undergrad 8 years ago, I would not be where I am today. Right now, I have the comfort of knowing that I could pay off my undergrad Stafford/Perkins loans 40x over, but why should I when they are locked in at 3.5%?
Wrong! You won't be filthy rich. Filthy rich is earning millions of dollars a year...or over a life-time. Most doctors are not filthy rich.
A doctor might make a great income, but when you compare a person making a very similar salary, the life-time income IS GREATER FOR THE OTHER PERSON.
That's silly. 6.8% may be cheap money, but it's still money that costs you every day you don't pay it off, and we're not talking about investing that money (e.g. margin investing), we're talking about putting off debt repayment and paying compounding interest in the interim. Plus, 16% is a MUCH higher yield than your typical investment account. So sure, if you can pull 16% you're still making a net of 9.2%, but even that's not right because you're loosing 6.8% on 200K, and making MAYBE 16% on whatever money you're able to contribute (which will not nearly be 200K for at least a couple of years worth of post-medical school investing). I'm a big proponent of investing, but paying down at least some of the $200K has to be a priority (at any interest rate).
Fair enough. After posting my response I just couldn't help but prove to myself that I was right (and willing to accept that I'm wrong). I can't fathom any circumstance where accruing debt on 200K is preferable to investing, unless you already have a huge investment account, OR get a ridiculous yield (16% doesn't cut it). My calculations of course have wild assumptions, but here are some numbers. (Interest accrues once at the end of the year, investments are made lump-sum and somehow accrue full interest the first year (I'm being generous), and school debt is paid interest-only- this interest reduces the amount available for investing each year, 6.8% debt interest, and a GENEROUS 16% ROI).Most student loans... Stafford and Grad Plus, for example, are simple interest... Not compound. Makes a pretty big difference.
His point was clear, but he failed to prove that point even using bloated numbers. Debt or no debt, a physician generally makes a comfortable living. His numbers yield a very reasonable lifestyle, one that is far better than I'm living now or than my parents ever lived. But on top of it, his numbers represent high costs and an income from the lowest paying sector of medicine. This is exactly why medical students are fleeing primary care- lowest income and high debt. Yet still, the numbers provided yield a comfortable (but not rich) existence. This scenario could quickly be modified by a) reducing expenses, b) going into a higher paying specialty, c) choosing a cheaper (state) medical school, or d) encouraging your spouse to work as well. On top this, there will come a day when school debt is repaid. If the physician focus's on getting this paid off ASAP there will then be plenty of room for excesses, investments, savings...whatever you want to do with your $150K/yr.I think this is the real message OP had in mind. Don't do it for the money, its not worth it. Do it because it is something you want to do because of intrinsic factors.
The Federal tax tables show that for a person making 98,000/year he will pay (21.8k if single and 17.5k if married).
What you also didn't take into consideration is that a lot of these family practices get HUGE bonuses from the hospital system that they are in. I know an Internal Med. guy that has a base salary of 180k/year. He gets ~160k/year in bonuses.
Here's the over 100k tax publication for a married couple...
Section BUse if your filing status is Married filing jointly or Qualifying widow(er). Complete the row below that applies to you.
Taxable income.
At least $100,000 but not over $128,500 $ × 25% (.25) then subtract $ 7,152.50 $
Over $128,500 but not over $195,850 $ × 28% (.28) then subtract $ 11,007.50 $
Over $195,850 but not over $349,700 $ × 33% (.33) then subtract $ 20,800.00 $
Over $349,700 $ × 35% (.35) $ $ 27,794.00 $
What you do, is take your income up to 99,000 (which is 17k for a married couple) and tax anything over 100,000 according to these tables.
So if you make 400k/year after deductions..
first 100k is 17k worth of taxes
next 300k is at 35% tax - $27,794
6K for property taxes? Where do you live? I think several of those figures are inflated.
Bull****
There is no 40% tax bracket. And even if someone is "in" the highest tax bracket, their entire income is not taxed at that level. It's a cumulative system where the amount of income in the first bracket is taxed at that level, and the amount of income in the second bracket is taxed at the second level, and so on until the highest bracket is reached and any remaining income is taxed at that level. The tax amounts from each bracket are then added together and that is the level of income tax paid. To determine the 'actual' tax rate, you divide that total by the original income. That percentage will be considerably less then the highest tax bracket rate and is the marginal tax rate. A single doctor making 100,000 would be placed in the 28% bracket which would put the marginal tax rate at more like 24 or 25%.
Edit: Glad to see other people got here, too. Yay, economics!
6K for property taxes? Where do you live? I think several of those figures are inflated.