I know a few COBOL programmers. They are all relatively old and earn a fortune because the script-kiddies falling out of university these days haven't learnt anything about COBOL in their studies So COBOL programmers are becoming very rare.
McBryce.
COBOL was the only exam I failed at university back in the mid 80s, which was a bit of a come down as I was quite a wizz at Pascal and assembly language. I never went to any of the COBOL lectures except for the first one. Unfortunately, I didn't realise it was an open book exam. I crammed in the 24 hours before the exam, including how to write all the boilerplate cruft from my head (there's an awful lot of it in COBOL), but failed to answer the questions in the way the lecturer wanted, although my code worked. It was simple stuff too, looping formatting etc.
As it was an EE course, I couldn't see the point of doing COBOL, especially as C was at that time very much in vogue and still in its ascendancy. Many lecturers just churn out the same crappy course they've been doing for a decade for undergrads.
"Je ne regrette rien", as Edith Piaf said rather more than once.
Little did I know that as an EE, a good deal of my career has also been tackling enterprise grade RDBMS. It's always good to have multiple strings to your bow.