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Kolmogorov's Ghost's avatar

Great post! Agree generally but I think it's worth pointing out too aspects that don't carry over to the US (maybe also to other places but I wouldn't know).

1. The (relative) financial advantage of doing the PhD. Most people doing a PhD in the US (at least in STEM) could make >2x more working instead (>5x more if they went to a good undergrad) and there aren't really tax advantages. Plus, the resume boost is not very large AFAIK unless you're gunning for really specific jobs and those tend to be selective enough that they won't take you if you just scrape by during your PhD.

2. Not having to move cities for the PhD is very rare in the US. Some people stay in the same school but the vast majority go somewhere else and most schools are far away from each other.

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Thom Scott-Phillips's avatar

Interesting post. I see some pushback in the comments and I note it comes from US experiences. Which matches the observation I was going to make: that UK and US PhDs are quite different. (I am British, with a British PhD, and have worked at both UK and US institutions.)

I agree with a lot of what you say here, but it is quite UK focused. The US PhD is significantly more demanding, and the modal US PhD graduate is ahead of the modal UK one, in terms of skills, experience, independence, etc.

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