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Lawyer

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AVG. SALARY

$120,780

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EDUCATION

First professional degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Math

Lawyers say they do very little business with numbers. Words are their specialty. There are times, however, when an attorney needs to get out the calculator.

When asked if lawyers need math skills, attorney Jeremy White laughs. "Yes, unfortunately," he says. "You think you avoid it going to law school, but...."

White cites consumer law as just one area of law in which math is used. "You have a contract with financing rates, APRs (annual percentage rates), a principal amount," he says. "If you're going to assess that consumer claim you've got to break all that down."

You are a personal injury lawyer and your client is suing for wages lost due to a car accident she had a few years ago. Because of her back and neck injuries, she has not been able to work since July 1, 2002.

The judgment is for the plaintiff, meaning you and your client have won. But the judge is not awarding full wage compensation. He says in his decision that your client didn't follow her exercise program to help the healing process, and that her abuse of painkillers kept her from being able to work sooner.

The judge concludes that the wage loss for the first year since the accident must be discounted by 50 percent. Since your client should have been fully recovered by the second year, the judge orders a discount of 75 percent on the wages for that 12-month period. For future losses and general damages, the judge allows an additional $15,000.

Your client's earnings for the first 6 months of 2002 (before the time of the accident) were $21,194. The judge says you can just double that figure to calculate a yearly earning figure for the wage loss periods.

For the 2-year period following the accident, what will your client's total settlement be? Remember to calculate the discounts for the first and second 12-month periods, and don't forget the general damages award.

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