I'm with Mukiha on this one.I started in the banking industry & I'm still in it.When I joined straight from campus I was getting a net of 32k....my net is nearly 3times that less than 2yrs later.
I have come to discover that what matters is not whether you work for long hours, the amount of cash you handle, the papers or even how much the bank makes.
The only thing that matters is the VALUE of your input i.e how many days the company can survive without your services.The guys I joined with still earn as low as 27k, some are on my level, others are even above mine.....if you have a chat with these 3 kinds of people, you will find that they reason very differently.For a young man/woman, the pre-occupation to me should be valuable experience and not salary. If you get this right, companies will start hunting you....instead of you doing the hunting.They will be sending their offers and CVs to you!
By the way, the low starting salaries are in all industries nowadays not just banks.There are too many graduates with good grades and no work skills looking for jobs.
But even better.....think of starting your own business where you decide how much you should pay yourself.
Formally employed people often live their employers' dream & forget about their own.