You can come out with a 60k job, but you better like what you're doing and you better be prepared to study outside of work. A few of the guys at my job got put on through bootcamps. I think only one of them started from scratch and it was his first time programming through the bootcamp. Yes, you can get a job with those bootcamps, but those bootcamps are rigorous and expensive. In fact, you don't even need a bootcamp. You can get a job if you put up several projects of your own... which is what I did... but that involved me taking a year off of work and studying nonstop in my own time and going through programming books cover to cover.
The thing is, the level of effort you're going to have to put in as a successful programmer is equivalent to the same amount of effort you're going to have to put in to be successful in any field if not greater. I'm telling you, sample programming out first. If you don't like it, then you really don't want to dump your 10,000 or a year down the drain... and with these bootcamps pumping out all of these candidates, the wages are going to start going down unless you are highly skilled, so be ready to put in your work. The money is there, but be ready to work.