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you’d think with all the new charterholders these days and the fact that most of their publications are electronic these days, the cost would be coming down

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I believe it was established on another thread that you don’t actually have to remain a member of a local chapter after you receive the charter, so you could drop that part.  I also seem to remember that you can get a reduced fee if you are unemployed for an extended period of time.
I don’t find the dues to be excessive, you can easily pay that much to play in corporate golf events, but my company picks up the tab.

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Some professional organizations have tiered fees tied to annual compensation.  Verification would potentially be complex, but I would prefer to se something like this in CFA land.  $400 is really nothing to worry about for someone earning multiple 6 figures or higher, but for the unemployed, it can be a real issue.

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i think the fees is way too high…for people like me who do not earn in dollars. it turns out to be a lot of money….and its only going to increase…even though im in AM, i agree with markbot…whats the point…

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“inactive CFA member” technically doesn’t mean anything because you can become a CFAI member without passing a single exam.  If you’re going to drop the charter WHILE you are looking for a job, you might as well not bother.  IMO all that says is “too cheap to pay the dues” or “doesn’t give a sh!t”.
I wouldn’t have a problem with the dues if they were spent on something worthwile, like making the CFA a more prestigious designation.  Instead, they spend the money on things like idiotic logo designs.

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I’m only a level 3 candidate, but I’m betting after a few years of having the letters, I’ll probably stop paying the fees and just put inactive CFA member on my resume if I’m searching for a new job.
Still gets the point across that you completed the program. The knowledge didn’t go out the window once you stopped paying fees.

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I wouldn’t throw $300 in the garbage even if I made $1M per year.

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$475 includes the local chapter fees, which you have to pay. It’s completely bogus. I change my mind…the fee should be like under $100 per year in total. But the key question each of you have to ask is what is your reservation price? What if the fee were $1000 per year….$2000 per year. At what price are you outraged. For me it is $475.
I worked in ER and now work in IB. Obviously, the CFA isn’t as useful in IB. In any case, once you reach a certain level the CFA is irrelevant IMO.
Thinking of $475 as a percentage of salary is illogical…thinking in terms of percentages is a common satisficing method. What you should do is cost-benefit analysis. I’m forcing my firm to pay these fees when instead they could be paying me more money….theoretically. Should the CFA Institute and NYSSA just keep charging you as high as you are willing to pay? Aren’t they not for profit organizations? What are they spending all this money on and why so much? If they cut their expenses, would it even matter? Why all the bureacracy?
I don’t choose fund managers based on whether they passed the CFA. I don’t choose equity analysts by CFA. I may hire a junior person based on the CFA. But once you are beyond the junior level, the CFA doesn’t matter anymore IMO.

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I can see where the original poster is coming from to a certain extent. I found the material I studied for the CFA exams to be very useful and helpful for my career. I don’t get anything like as much reward out of the membership. My main interaction with the CFAI now is deleting the endless spam they seem to feel the need to bombard my inbox with. There so much that I am amazed I even noticed the reminder e-mail about fees.

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“less than $0.75 a day!”

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