Law in Contemporary Society

Why is life at Big Law notoriously bad?

Talks with Big Law attorneys left me concerned about Big Law quality of life. This discussion centers on some factors which affect associates’ quality of life—especially women associates.

-- By SylvieRampal - 21 Feb 2008

The realized billable hour

Young associates are inexperienced and inefficient, this is why their time is cheaper. What a senior associate accomplishes in 30-40 minutes, may take a first year 3-4 hours. Increasingly savvy clients are aware of this and demand either the work of senior associates and partners or a cost reduction. The realized billable hour is the amount of time a client actually pays for. 1 Whether a firm counts pro bono work, recruitment efforts, business development, nominal or realized billable hours is significant.

Leveraging

Associates are paid a percentage of revenue earnings, the rest is applied to generalized business expenses i.e. overhead or becomes partner profit. Leverage is the ratio of associates to partners; more associates equals more partner profit. Big Law firms are generally highly leveraged (3 or more associates per partner). 2 Associates who become equity-sharing partners get big shares of firm revenue. But high leverage ratios also indicate increased difficulty in making partner at a firm (of ever earning more than roughly 1/3 of the revenue an associate brings into the firm) and potentially, less time for mentoring young associates.

Long hours

As first year salaries rose—the choice was to either “decrease partner profits or to raise associates’ work load” . 3 (Guess which option won out?)

The intensely competitive environment, the varied options for legal services meant raising prices was not an option. In a contest between you and the partners, you lose.

Increases in first year salaries have a spiral effect on senior associate and partner salaries. In ‘On Being a Happy, Healthy, and Ethical Member of an Unhappy, Unhealthy, and Unethical Profession’, Schiltz states “Increases in starting salaries for first year associates lead to increases in the salaries and workloads of all lawyers.” 4

Gendered Differences

Some of my interactions with women attorneys have been disheartening: One female attorney said since she and her husband were attorneys she had to sacrifice her career or her marriage. The statement would seem hyperbolic except that society expects career women to be primary care givers. Large numbers of associates (leveraging) are good for the firm, so women are a lucrative addition to the labor force but the landscape of law firms has not changed. 5 Women are easily relegated to the Mommy Track where working less than 60 hours a week is considered part-time. (Part-time is negatively correlated with making partner.)

The consequences of having children on an associate’s career are of concern to men and women, but more so to women. 6 The Hagan-Kay study identified that women are more likely to be depressed when they have less policy-making opportunities and or when they perceive childbearing as a negatively determinant of occupational success. Men and women fear having children will result in “loss of seniority, delay in promotion …unreasonable work load following parental leave, to test their commitment to work, loss of clients…and loss of income.” 7

Changing the Traditional Employment Scheme

Big Law is resistant to truly flexible work schedules. After learning of the heavy demands Big Law makes on one’s personal life, I asked Big Law partners why firms have not instituted flex days or limited hours for associates willing to take significant pay cuts. (I got some interesting looks.) Basically, stressing the importance of a personal life to Big Law translates as a negligible work ethic and a lack of commitment to the firm. Besides, the pay raise is a form of remuneration everyone can agree on—not everyone wants more vacation time, sleep, increased parental leave.

What now?

Despite all this I intend to begin my legal career at Big Law: The cachet of Big Law speaks volumes long after you have left the firm, some of the top legal career paths in government and industry regulation prefer the transactional expertise that Big Law provides, and top boutique firms generally make lateral hires (wooing Big Law associates once they have gained experience and a specialization).

Among the idealized benefits of being a lawyer are financial security, autonomy, prestige, intellectual challenge, social and political influence. Eventually, one arrives at the conclusion that she is not willing to sacrifice her life for additional pay raises. Some have made statements to that effect now, but how does one keep true to his or her values? My advice:

Make clear what your professional and life goals are, and what you are willing to sacrifice personally to achieve professionally.

Memorialize your preferences with people who care about you enough to force you to answer for deviating from these stated preferences.

Alternatives

Specialization can translate into a lucrative knowledge base that facilitates the move to in-house, banking, management, consulting, insurance or government regulatory positions.

Trusts & Estates--> Banking-->small pay cut, regular hours Insurance Compliance/ Litigation-->Insurance--> regular hours Bankruptcy, Tax, Mergers & Acquisitions--> In-house, Regulation, Consultancy--> salary varies

Ex. Securities and Exchange Commission Staff Attorneys have policy-making, advisory, investigative accountancy, and appellate advocacy roles. 8 Entry-level $70,000 to $89,000 1 yr legal experience $84,000 to $107,000 2 yr legal experience $99,000 to $127,000 Senior/Supervisory positions $114,000 to $177,000


References 1. Patrick J. Schiltz, On Being a Happy, Healthy, and Ethical Member of an Unhappy, Unhealthy, and Unethical Profession, 52 Vanderbilt L. REV. 871, 898 (1999). 2. 2007-2008 NALP Directory of Legal Employers. NALP Press Release “Law Firm Leverage Drops to Levels Last Seen 10 Years Ago”. 3. Deborah L. Rhode, The Professionalism Problem, 39 WM. & MARY L. REV. 283, 308-10 (1998). 4. Patrick J. Schiltz, On Being a Happy, Healthy, and Ethical Member of an Unhappy, Unhealthy, and Unethical Profession, 52 Vanderbilt L. REV. 871, 898 (1999). 5. John Hagan, Fiona Kay, Even Lawyers Get the Blues: Gender, Depression and Job Satisfaction in Legal Practice, 41 Law and Society Review, 51-75 (2007). 6. John Hagan, Fiona Kay, Even Lawyers Get the Blues: Gender, Depression and Job Satisfaction in Legal Practice, 41 Law and Society Review, 51-75 (2007). 7. John Hagan, Fiona Kay, Even Lawyers Get the Blues: Gender, Depression and Job Satisfaction in Legal Practice, 41 Law and Society Review, 51-75 (2007) 8. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. http://www.sec.gov/jobs/lawyers.htm


You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" on the next line:

# * Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = TWikiAdminGroup, SylvieRampal

Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of that line. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated list

Navigation

Webs Webs

r1 - 21 Feb 2008 - 06:19:47 - SylvieRampal
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM