Ask someone at the reference desk of your local public library for the Occupational Outlook Handbook. It lists all kinds of information you would need to know,(including the salary) of just about any occupation you can think of. The median expected salary for a typical Chemist I in the United States is $42,659. The following is an edited exerpt from the Occupational Outlook Handbook: Median annual earnings of chemists in May 2004 were $56,060. The middle 50 percent earned between $41,900 and $76,080. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $33,170, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $98,010. Median annual earnings of materials scientists in May 2004 were $72,390. The middle 50 percent earned between $53,350 and $92,340. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $40,030, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $113,460. Median annual earnings in the industries employing the largest numbers of chemists in May 2004 are shown below: Federal government $80,550 Scientific research and development services 62,460 Pharmaceutical and medicine manufacturing 57,050 Architectural, engineering, and related services 42,370 The American Chemical Society (ACS)reports that in 2004 the median salary of all of its members with a bachelor
Ask someone at the reference desk of your local public library for the Occupational Outlook Handbook. It lists all kinds of information you would need to know,(including the salary) of just about any occupation you can think of.
That will depend on several factors. I will assume you are asking about an active researcher rather than a desk job. Here's a few criteria to consider:
Level of education Prestige of degree granting institution Post graduate work experience (e.g. post-doc, years of experience, etc.) Relevance of degree to position Location of job Size and profitability of company Other benefits in compensation package (flexible work schedule, stocks, retirement, etc.) You may want to look at the latest ACS salary survey as well for more information.
I am a Ph.D. physical chemist (no post-doc) working as a research scientist at a small SF Bay Area startup. I started this job in 2005 at $72k, which was increased to $75k within a few months. At my first annual review this was raised to $80k and then to $85k at my second review review. I receive no bonuses but do have some stock options. My supervisor allowed me a look at a recent Radford survey for this area. According to this survey my salary history is about average for this area. My wife is also a Ph.D. physical chemist (no post-doc) working at a larger, more established Bay Area company but as a materials characterization analyst rather than a research scientist. Her salary history is a parallels mine but is 2-3 thousand lower at each step but her bonuses make the levels more equitable.
In both our cases it took over a year to land our first jobs. It is not uncommon for an inexperienced scientist to spend at least several months looking for their first job. Another factor to keep in mind as is the much lower pay one receives as a graduate student/post-doc for those who pursue an advanced degree as well as the cost of living to salary ratio in the area you wish to work.
Hope this helps
30000 to 35000
Y
$96,526.00 A year
68000 thanks hmmdapteib
depends on where and when you work. private practice or for a hospital
Peanuts
aound 70-75,000 a year as of 2012
There is no way to tell exactly how much a physical therapist aide earns unless you ask them. Different people make different amounts of money.
a chemist doesn't make just a paycheck every week it makes a amount of money every day that the drug or the product is
The average salary for a physical therapist assistant is $52,320 per year. Physical therapists earn more than the majority of healthcare jobs.
How much money does a dental hygiene earn in the state of Michigan?
how much money does a anesthesiology