1%!?!? What kind of luxurious industry are you consulting in!!!??? Half that is considered generous!
But you are right about D&C and unfortunately we engineers have cannibalized ourselves by undercutting each other, further driving down fees. And if we don't be competitive with fees, the contractor boots us off the job in favour of their own engineer who will detail the job the way that suits them. We've been threatened multiple times by contractors to get rid of wall ties and make everything precast, singly reinforced and dowelled, because "their other engineer did it on their last job".
And the problem is, many chartered/registered/RPEQ or what-have-you engineers are the ones we are talking about in this thread, lacking in thorough understanding of seismic theory (amongst other areas). Hence why their fees can be so low, because they don't need to consider seismic, they don't need to consider progressive collapse! Because they don't even know what that is! And no one is there to stop them!
My main issue is that becoming registered is just a fee. You merely purchase your right to sign off on structures, and most companies pay that yearly fee for you. 3 to 5 years out, fill out a couple forms and write a report and (now) a phone interview, and you're qualified to sign off on a 50 storey building.... she'll be right.
Agent666, I don't think we'll run out of engineers, we'll just cut the fat. And the rest can do the job properly.