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Doctors top list of highest-paid jobs in the isles

Working as an animal trainer in Hawaii isn’t going to get you rich.

Neither will a job as a bank teller, food server or retail salesperson.

But if you listened to your parents growing up and became a doctor or a lawyer, chances are you’re doing pretty well financially.

Family and general practitioners have the highest average annual salaries in Hawaii at $228,220, according to a top-100 list by Zippia, a career resource website that culled its data from the May 2015 occupational employment and wage estimates from the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. Even the average entry-level wage for family and general practitioners is nothing to sneeze at: $76,240.

The average annual wage for all 603 entries on the complete Hawaii BLS list of occupations was $47,740 with an average hourly wage of $22.95 for the 619,960 people represented. Some listings are incomplete, such as for musicians and singers, because they generally don’t work year-round. In other cases, salary estimates were not released by people or companies in the professions.

Seven of the top 10 highest average annual salaries are linked to the medical profession. The only exceptions were judges, who came in fourth at $189,300; chief executives, who ranked seventh at $158,870; and postsecondary education administrators, who were 10th at $128,590.

Among the rest of the top 10, physicians and surgeons were second at $218,860, internists were third at $209,180, nurse anesthetists were fifth at $186,330, pediatricians were sixth at $170,400, dentists were eighth at $154,880 and psychiatrists were ninth at $137,790.

Lawyers came in 23rd place with an average annual wage of $104,180.

Occupying the spot at No. 100 were engineering technicians, excluding drafters, who came in at $74,940.

“Everyone’s favorite dentists place No. 8 on the list of highest-paid professions in Hawaii,” Zippia said. “So the next time you sit there while they drill, you can dwell on the fact that they are getting extremely well paid for it.”

But there’s more to consider, especially for college graduates, than where you can make the most money.

“We don’t tell them what the best field is,” said Wendy Sora, director of the Manoa Career Center at the University of Hawaii. “Our students are in 100-plus majors, and their interests vary in what is important to them, where they’re going to be working and what they imagine they’re going to be doing. We want them to take a holistic point of view and not just look at how much they’re going to earn, but what fits their lifestyle, what’s important to them and where they want to live, as well as what kinds of jobs for them have more long-term development and growth. Those are things we’d like them to consider and not just their beginning salary. We want them to know that their careers are made up of a number of things besides salary.”

Sora said it’s important for college students to get a preview of the type of profession they are considering before entering the field.

“We did a study of our graduates, and, based on our study, the majority of our alumni participated in an internship, a co-op, a field study or worked part time before they left the university,” she said. “That’s important in moving on and building their resume and not just jumping into an entry-level position.

“We work with a number of employers who come and recruit and want to work with the UH-Manoa campus. With such a low unemployment rate (3.2 percent in Hawaii), we’ve definitely seen a steady increase of employers from private industry as well as government partners in city, state and federal government who are coming to share information about career opportunities and jobs in the state.”

Sora said the recruiters follow the national trends as far as the majority of jobs they represent.

“They come in from business and professional services, including information technology, engineering, finance and banking,” she said. “Then, of course, we see lots of jobs in the area of retail sales and service.”

Of course, there are more people employed in some of the professions than others, and that can skew the average salaries on the overall list. General and operations managers had the most employees in the top 100, with the 11,080 working in that area earning an average annual wage of $101,630 and ranking in 25th place.

Registered nurses were next in the top-100 list in terms of the number of people employed at 10,990. They ranked 43rd with an average annual wage of $90,130.

Of the complete list of 603 occupations, child care workers had the lowest average annual wage at $20,280 with an average hourly wage of $9.75. That’s just above Hawaii’s minimum wage of $8.50 an hour.

With tourism being the state’s No. 1 industry, it’s not surprising that service jobs employed thousands of people. The average wage, though, was relatively low in professions with an abundance of workers.

Among the lowest were the 11,740 people employed in the combined food preparation and serving workers category, where the average annual wage was $22,230 and the average hourly wage was $10.69. The category includes fast-food workers.

The 14,790 cashiers didn’t fare much better with an average annual wage of $23,520 and an average hourly wage of $11.31.

Food preparation workers, with 8,720 listed, received an average annual wage of $24,290 and an average hourly wage of $11.68.

Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners, averaged an annual wage of $26,780 and an hourly wage of $12.87 for the 13,330 people in that profession.

The 24,770 retail salespersons listed fared slightly better at $26,860 for their average annual wage and $12.91 for their average hourly wage.

Waiters and waitresses (15,200 employed), meanwhile, make an average annual wage of $32,480, while bank tellers (1,900 people) are below that at $26,250.

As for being an animal trainer, well, it might be fun to teach new tricks to a cat, dog or even a dolphin, but with an average annual wage of $26,300 for the 80 people employed in that profession, it’s going to be a long journey to easy street.

On the Net:

>> For a complete list of the 603 occupations, go to bit.ly/29u2eka Opens in a new tab.

HIGHEST PAYING JOBS IN HAWAII

The medical profession dominates the top-paid positions in the state, according to career resource website Zippia, which gathered its data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Some occupations found on the BLS list are not included in Zippia’s ranking due to incomplete data.

  RANK JOB TITLE AVERAGE SALARY ENTRY LEVEL SALARY No. OF PEOPLE
  1 Family and General Practitioners $228,220 $76,240 930
  2 Physicians and Surgeons, All Other $218,860 $76,770 1,000
  3 Internists, General $209,180 $119,210 180
  4 Judges, Magistrate Judges, and Magistrates $189,300 $170,330 130
  5 Nurse Anesthetists $186,330 $132,990 60
  6 Pediatricians, General $170,400 $120,210 70
  7 Chief Executives $158,870 $65,660 2,080
  8 Dentists, General $154,880 $85,760 530
  9 Psychiatrists $137,790 $52,850 200
  10 Education Administrators, Postsecondary $128,590 $54,190 310
  11 Real Estate Brokers $118,630 $46,390 340
  12 Sales Engineers $116,470 $64,650 130
  13 Astronomers $116,420 $54,340 90
  14 Pharmacists $115,520 $100,210 1,450
  15 Biological Science Teachers, Postsecondary $115,180 $48,480 620
  16 Nurse Practitioners $114,220 $81,240 330
  17 Medical and Health Services Managers $111,160 $49,540 1,250
  18 Natural Sciences Managers $110,350 $70,230 210
  19 Computer and Information Research Scientists $110,230 $67,950 90
  20 Air Traffic Controllers $108,200 $65,740 240
  21 Optometrists $107,960 $84,090 250
  22 Computer and Information Systems Managers $106,650 $64,670 730
  23 Lawyers $104,180 $64,310 1,900
  24 Physical Scientists, All Other $102,780 $44,910 150
  25 General and Operations Managers $101,630 $44,400 11,080
  26 Marketing Managers $100,730 $51,440 510
  27 Financial Managers $99,720 $51,030 2,100
  28 Securities, Commodities, and Financial Services Sales Agents $97,970 $30,200 680
  29 Personal Financial Advisors $97,280 $33,410 340
  30 Atmospheric and Space Scientists $97,150 $66,530 60
  31 Construction Managers $96,810 $54,020 1,630
  32 Detectives and Criminal Investigators $96,450 $73,180 480
  33 Geoscientists, Except Hydrologists and Geographers $96,110 $53,410 60
  34 Physicists $95,910 $76,400 60
  35 Electronics Engineers, Except Computer $94,750 $67,310 410
  36 Software Developers, Systems Software $93,950 $63,780 680
  37 First-Line Supervisors of Police and Detectives $93,710 $71,620 750
  38 Business Teachers, Postsecondary $93,180 $33,380 270
  39 Compensation and Benefits Managers $93,080 $46,520 40
  40 Training and Development Managers $92,830 $49,090 170
  41 Purchasing Managers $91,110 $53,040 280
  42 Engineers, All Other $90,670 $46,890 760
  43 Registered Nurses $90,130 $63,350 10,990
  44 Education Administrators, Elementary and Secondary School $89,970 $66,510 890
  45 Public Relations and Fundraising Managers $89,950 $50,190 370
  46 Physician Assistants $89,830 $54,150 180
  47 Managers, All Other $89,420 $42,360 2,120
  48 Economics Teachers, Postsecondary $88,420 $35,380 70
  49 Physical Therapists $88,110 $61,150 710
  50 Human Resources Managers $87,610 $52,390 520
  51 Computer Occupations, All Other $87,560 $68,330 1,380
  52 Physics Teachers, Postsecondary $87,470 $48,610 60
  53 Social Scientists and Related Workers, All Other $87,260 $59,770 360
  54 Software Developers, Applications $86,950 $51,910 970
  55 Transportation, Storage, and Distribution Managers $86,540 $52,000 510
  56 Life Scientists, All Other $86,440 $42,700 80
  57 Nuclear Medicine Technologists $86,080 $66,600 90
  58 Computer Science Teachers, Postsecondary $86,020 $38,830 110
  59 Electrical Engineers $85,020 $54,640 850
  60 Marine Engineers and Naval Architects $84,850 $62,880 100
  61 First-Line Supervisors of Fire Fighting and Prevention Workers $84,680 $65,650 450
  62 Arbitrators, Mediators, and Conciliators $84,430 $61,120 30
  63 Environmental Engineers $84,270 $47,810 180
  64 Administrative Law Judges, Adjudicators, and Hearing Officers $84,090 $55,580 50
  65 Information Security Analysts $84,070 $54,370 190
  66 Political Science Teachers, Postsecondary $83,880 $36,280 60
  67 Electrical and Electronics Repairers, Powerhouse, Substation, and Relay $83,870 $67,480 90
  68 Real Estate Sales Agents $83,620 $36,870 220
  69 Logisticians $83,560 $57,620 390
  70 Magnetic Resonance Imaging Technologists $83,020 $63,580 80
  71 Medical Scientists, Except Epidemiologists $82,950 $42,880 310
  72 Industrial Engineers $82,860 $43,150 100
  73 Clinical, Counseling, and School Psychologists $82,610 $44,240 750
  74 Architects, Except Landscape and Naval $82,070 $45,250 510
  75 Computer Hardware Engineers $81,090 $53,070 150
  76 Historians $81,020 $47,100 40
  77 Commercial Pilots $80,700 $47,980 270
  78 Sales Managers $80,610 $41,020 2,530
  79 Health Diagnosing and Treating Practitioners, All Other $80,600 $42,430 230
  80 Mechanical Engineers $80,450 $48,840 560
  81 Transportation Inspectors $79,580 $42,560 130
  82 Education Administrators, All Other $79,510 $35,510 250
  83 Civil Engineers $78,950 $50,950 1,970
  84 Anthropology and Archeology Teachers, Postsecondary $78,900 $33,040 50
  85 Computer Systems Analysts $78,140 $47,250 1,110
  86 Occupational Therapists $77,870 $61,600 370
  87 Power Plant Operators $77,440 $55,550 220
  88 Area, Ethnic, and Cultural Studies Teachers, Postsecondary $77,090 $29,600 170
  89 Advertising and Promotions Managers $76,610 $46,750 240
  90 Library Science Teachers, Postsecondary $76,420 $55,870 60
  91 Geography Teachers, Postsecondary $76,310 $33,850 50
  92 Industrial Production Managers $76,250 $40,670 200
  93 Conservation Scientists $76,250 $49,380 110
  94 Diagnostic Medical Sonographers $76,160 $49,790 170
  95 Chemistry Teachers, Postsecondary $75,680 $31,950 60
  96 Nursing Instructors and Teachers, Postsecondary $75,560 $36,940 240
  97 First-Line Supervisors of Construction Trades and Extraction Workers $75,170 $43,720 2,160
  98 Crane and Tower Operators $75,160 $51,900 160
  99 Biological Scientists, All Other $75,070 $51,060 280
  100 Engineering Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other $74,940 $49,330 610

13 responses to “Doctors top list of highest-paid jobs in the isles”

  1. keonimay says:

    Compared to the mainland salaries, all of the above mentioned categories, are underpaid.

    For almost all of the doctors & lawyers, you must enter those respective colleges, as an academic thoroughbred. They are at the top, of the Academic Darwinism.

    There is a great shortage of doctors in Hawaii.

  2. wrightj says:

    …and it’s still not enough.

  3. KB says:

    where is the blue collar and politicians ???

  4. dragoninwater says:

    They conveniently left out the fat cat political jobs, like the ones held by Caldwell and his cronies all have earning seven figures after bribes and kickbacks from their mainland rail buddies. Let’s not forget all those union cargo shipping jobs due to the Jones Act paying $300k+ salaries to high school dropouts. So remember kids, here on Giligan’s island, it’s not the courses you pick in school and the graduate degrees you hold, it’s all who you know and how many brown Aloha envelopes you pass to get a union membership card to the big $$$Buck$ Club$$$!

  5. inverse says:

    For the doctors salaries, is that gross or net? Don’t they have to pay malpractice insurance and other heavy expenses out of their gross salary?

    • dragoninwater says:

      That’s gross salary, and yes doctors and surgeons have to pay a very hefty price for malpractice coverage. It starts at a few thousand per year and goes up to $200k+ for neurosurgeons. Average seems to be $14k -$40k but it all depends on specialty and many other factors. So next time you you see a neurosurgeon commanding a $500k salary be aware that almost half of it might vanish to pay the insurance malpractice bill before the surgeon ever sees a dime himself/herself. Don’t let the high salaries fool you into believing that they are doing well, many surgeons threw in the towel long ago and outright refuse to perform their profession due to the liability costs.

  6. btaim says:

    When people refers to “doctors” such as in the headline to this article as well as in the comments, why do they assume that it means “physicians” – which is really what the article is referring to? There are many kinds of doctors. Not all are physicians.

  7. inverse says:

    As someone else pointed out Hawaii longshoreman make something like $140,000 and the crane operators at the docks with overtime make something like $180,000 and they do NOT have to pay medical malpractice insurance and other business expenses! What about UH faculty and administrators that easily make $100K, $200K up to over $400K by the UH Med school dean and he does NOT see any patients nor have to pay medical malpractice insurance as well. What about Hinshaw in the UH med school who is not a medical doctor but makes over $200K. A very large portion of the UH budget goes to salaries for overpaid administrators who do nothing every day except contemplate their next vacation and making they can afford to buy a nice home in Waialae Kahala or Hawaii Kai and money to pay for their kids attendance at Punahou or Iolani and then pay their kids college tuition to attend a high prestige college like Stanford, Harvard, Yale, etc.

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