Postdocs are, besides graduate students, the main workforce in academic research. Following the PhD, the postdoc position is the only way to follow a research career within academia. Many PhDs around the world are advised to go to the USA for a postdoc - or two - because it is known for its large research output and high quality research institutes. Around two thirds of postdocs in the USA are foreign born.
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In this episode I talk to Gary McDowell, a UK born scientists in protein research who over the last few years worked with “Future of Research” to investigate the conditions postdocs in the USA are facing. The situations appears to be far from optimal. And this doesn’t just hurt the postdocs and their families, it also impacts research productivity.
The goals of Future of Research are to enable PhDs to make better career decisions about whether a postdoc is a good decision, and if so how to choose the right place to apply to. Another fundamental problem is the disconnect between the lived experience of junior academics, and their senior supervisors.
At the same time the data they collected unveil systemic problems with postdocs in the USA, and Future of Research are working to change academia for the better.
Postdoc: Advertisement and Reality
The postdoc, as advertised, is a sort of apprenticeship position where PhDs develop their own research projects to become leading scientists heading their own labs. The reality is that postdocs have replaced staff researchers, working on their Principal Investigator’s project, and hardly ever being mentored, or trained in leadership and management. Even training in basic day-to-day parts of the work as an academic scholar, like conducting peer review, don’t seem to be part of their experience. At the same time postdocs are still being classified as “trainees” to justify not paying them their worth, and to deny them benefits such as proper health care.
Salary
Because postdocs are paid below their skill and experience levels, and mostly are not given the mentoring and training promised, they are basically exploited as cheap labor by the academic system. A few years ago, Obama tried to change a labor law, which would have had the effect that institutions would need to give postdocs a raise - or face the issue of having to actually keep track of postdoc working hours. Unfortunately this change didn’t become effective. On the bright side, most universities still implemented the raise - even though some universities apparently were trying to take it back. So this was good news.
Future of Research collected salary data from postdocs just after this happened (and continues to do so for a longitudinal study), and found a median income of around $47484 - a number that clearly could be related to the planned labor law adjustment. So this was a positive finding. However, we should not forget that taking all people with doctorates in the USA, median salaries are in the ranges of $70 000 to $100 000. Even worse, doing a postdoc has negative long-term effects on income that have been tracked up to 15 years following graduation to a PhD, which seem to come as a surprise to many, including industry representatives.
Benefits
The USA are infamous for their bad health care and labor protection situation. Many PhDs from countries with socialized or mandated benefits, like in Europe, will be surprised that things like basic health care, vacation of more than 2 weeks, and maternal protection (let alone parental leave), are not really a given in America. And Universities often will take any excuse not to pay benefits.
Vice versa, Americans appear to be quite surprised that in the UK, for example, there is a training time mandate by funding providers. In the USA the PI has full control over a postdoc’s time. And not only are PIs allowed to keep their “trainees” from getting trained in workshops and elsewhere,