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<p><a href=“https://career.berkeley.edu/Major/MCB.stm[/url]”>https://career.berkeley.edu/Major/MCB.stm</a></p>
<p>A decent percentage, but far from the majority, go on to medical or other professional school. However, the majority who do not face poor job and career prospects. Also, those who go for a PhD do not face a particularly good job market either; see [Education:</a> The PhD factory : Nature News](<a href=“http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110420/full/472276a.html]Education:”>Education: The PhD factory | Nature) .</p>
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<p>History, political science, and psychology graduates find higher average pay than MCB (or IB) graduates. So do American studies, Asian studies, cognitive science, ethnic studies, interdisciplinary studies, legal studies, linguistics, media studies, and political economy graduates.</p>
<p><a href=“https://career.berkeley.edu/Major/Major.stm[/url]”>https://career.berkeley.edu/Major/Major.stm</a></p>
<p>Of course, job markets can change, so any policy attempting to chase job market demands with tuition subsidies for specific majors would require yearly maintenance. Remember that civil engineering and architecture went from boom (2005) to bust (2009) in just four years – if the state policy were to increase subsidies to induce students to study civil engineering and architecture in 2005, that would have just increased the number of unemployed civil engineers and architects when they graduated in 2009.</p>