<p>Homer, where did I ever say that you needed an engineering degree to do this? I didn’t. You need to learn to read what others post. I am merely using this as an example that refutes what cluless people like you always say about the so called engineering “salary cap.” There is no “salary cap” because of these possibilites that I am outlining. Business majors like you always talk about the engineering “salary cap” but then what does that say about business majors? Statistically, they have a lower salary cap than engineers, yet business majors always seem to leave this part out. And don’t even start with investment bankers making more than engineers. Only a tiny fraction of business majors will ever make what an investment banker makes.</p>
<p>The point…There is no point in bringing up engineering salary caps when you leave out the fact that statistically, engineers out earn business majors (yes accountants too) throughout their careers. Oh and saying that a business major is more broad than engineering might be true but it is not necessarily more marketable. Remember, engineers can work in business and many do (just look at the statistic of % of CEOs with engineering degrees) but business majors can not work in engineering.</p>