I kind of scanned the article.
When I saw the title of the thread, I thought to myself, 'what prestige?' I have never thought that engineering was a prestigeous field. When people list the "prestigeous" professions, Doctors, Lawyers, Accountants, and continue past that, when are the engineers listed? From my experience almost never.
If a real estate agent were touring a prospect through your neighborhood and pointing out "oh, a Doctor lives there, a Lawyer lives there, a...." do you think he/she would say "an engineer lives there?" I doubt it.
If you state that you are an engineer a few people might acknowledge that you are in a field where you have completed a rigerous education and have to use your brain but most people are like the Governor of a southern (USA) state once that was wishing everyone well at a University graduation and after wishing that the Doctors and Nurses would all get a new hospital to work in, wished on the engineers that they would all get a new train to drive. True story.
Our salaries stay low compared to the prestigeous professionals because we do what we do because we like it, not because it is lucrative. Lawyers get into politics and make the laws so that they benefit Lawyers. Doctors, well, there is God and then there are Doctors (according to most of them). But when you need a Doctor, do you go to an Accountant?
In engineering, (and I am not trying to start a food fight here) you don't even have to be an engineer to be an engineer. There are many non-degreed engineers with the job title of engineer. There are many non-engineers with the title of engineer. The maintenance men in the building I work in are "building engineers". I don't think some of them can even write. (Overstatement with tongue in cheek.) But if they can write, I doubt that they can spell engineer.
I worked for a British company once and everyone that worked there in any capacity above secretary was an engineer of some type. It just meant that they handled some type of technical task - parts engineer, tendering engineer, sales engineer, marketing engineer, service engineer, etc. I doubt there were more than a couple of university engineering educations in the whole bunch.
Until we in the profession police ourselves and lean on legislatures to limit the use of the title "engineer" (not to be confused with the title of "Professional Engineer" - a totally different thread) to those that have paid the dues and are actually educated and/or experienced as engineers we will fall short in the prestige category IMHO.
Have you ever heard of a Doctor that wasn't a real doctor? Well, not for long anyway. Have you ever heard of an Attorney that wasn't registered with the Bar, a public accountant that wasn't certified? Those professions control who can throw around the title of the profession and present themselves as such.
Can you imagine the maintenance guys at a hospital being referred to as the "building Doctors"? The X-ray Technicians as the X-Ray Doctors? The ambulance drivers as the "ambulance doctors?"
We on the other hand are content to crunch our numbers and not care if the guy in the next desk ever went to college or not if he can do the work and is competent. And I have met my share of non-degreed engineers who were craker jack engineers in the specialty area where they had their experience.
Even this site which is supposed to be for engineering professionals is full of members who don't come anywhere near qualifying as even a building engineer, much less a degreed earned, experienced, functioning engineer.
I think we have a long way to go before we can claim any prestige. I doubt we will ever get there. We as a group are just not that political.
And that said, I don't care. I do what I do because I like it and not for prestige. Let the Doctors and Lawyers bask in the glow of their prestige. (And get the emergency calls in the middle of the night.)
My opinion only. And I'm kind of new to the business, I have only been an engineer for a little more than 40 years now.
rmw