Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pass on college? Not if you want to make more money

- By Anna Helhoski

Skeptical of the four-year college degree? It’s still your best bet to make money.

Backlash against college as a common stop on the road to adulthood has mounted over the past decade. Critics say four-year degree programs saddle most students with five-digit debt without a clear path from classroom to career.

Nearly half (46 percent) of all families surveyed in November and December 2020 by Gallup for the Carnegie Corporatio­n of New York said they would prefer their children attend alternativ­es to four-year institutio­ns — even when there were no financial barriers.

But when you compare the value of a four-year degree with other credential­s — a high school diploma, certificat­e programs and associate degrees — it still puts workers at an advantage in the labor market and leads to higher lifetime earnings, on average.

If a college degree is an investment, it’s a good one, according to the New York Federal Reserve. The annual return on a typical four-year degree is around 14 percent, it calculates, well above the threshold of “good” returns for stocks (around 7 percent) and bonds (3 percent).

In dollar terms, graduates with a bachelor’s degree will earn on average about $78,000 annually, compared with a high school diploma earner who receives around $45,000 annually, according to 2019 data from the New York Federal Reserve.

However, “on average” doesn’t mean that the return on your education, or college earnings premium, will always be a gain. Where you attend school, how much debt you take on, what you study and where you live after school all help determine your return. Many of those factors are influenced by your race, ethnicity and gender.

Student loan debt is difficult to avoid and even more challengin­g to repay. College costs rose 117 percent from 1985-86 to 2018-19, according to federal data. Wages, meanwhile, didn’t keep pace, growing only 19 percent during the same period, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

However, loans are still the primary vehicle for families without wealth to obtain college degrees. In order to make your degree worth it, you have to earn enough to justify it. That means carrying debt that won’t put you underwater — a manageable student loan payment is around 10% of your discretion­ary after-tax income.

To get the best return and be able to repay debt, graduation is crucial — many borrowers who default will have debt but no degree.

“That’s the worst-case scenario — you’re incurring some of those costs but with very, very little benefit,” says Jonathan Rothwell, principal economist at Gallup.

What you study in school will affect the type of job you can get, your earnings and your ability to repay debt.

Average earnings at mid-career are highest among those who hold a bachelor’s degree in fields like science, technology, engineerin­g and math, or STEM ($76,000), business ($67,000) and health ($65,000), according to a 2015 data report from Georgetown University’s Center for Education and the Workforce.

The same report found the lowest median mid-career earnings among those whose bachelor’s degrees were in field s like arts, humanities and liberal arts ($51,000), as well as teaching and serving roles such as social work ($46,000).

Where you live after attaining your degree also affects its value, according to the results of a May 2020 study for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a conservati­ve nonprofit think tank.

“In general, college degrees are a good investment, but the return in terms of cosmopolit­an areas is phenomenal,” says John Winters, associate professor of economics at Iowa State University.

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