<p>A two-income household making a net 60k/year (before taxes?) with four kids is pretty poor, assuming both parents are working full time jobs and living in the US.</p>
<p>Business is way easier than cancer if you’re in the market for money, lol. </p>
<p>Back to the OP – there’s a direct correlation between parental income levels and SAT scores (which I imagine is caused by better educational resources with respect to the SAT and not intelligence but that’s not for here, lol) and a D.C. between parental income and offspring’s income, so unless their respective causal mechanisms are, like, diametric opposites, I’d think that there’d be some overlap. That being said, and assuming that higher SAT scores tend to be coupled with greater college opportunities and acceptances and graduation rates and whatnot, and there being some rather firmly established statistical correlations between education level and income, I would say that higher SAT scorers make more money on average than lower SAT scorers, lol.</p>
<p>Oh, and isolated instances are useless! ;D</p>