The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Study ranks Atlanta 27th in millennial education

- By Michael E. Kanell mkanell@ajc.com

When it comes to the percentage of millennial­s who have college degrees, metro Atlanta ranks in the top third of the country, according to a new study.

The study, released Monday by the Brookings Institutio­n, shows 39 percent of Atlantans between the ages of 25 and 34 have graduated from college or achieved higher degrees.

Metro Atlanta placed 27th among 100 American metro areas, according to Brookings.

The study also throws some shade on Atlanta’s bid to win the right to be the site of a second headquarte­rs for Seattle-based Amazon.

Among many factors, Amazon is thought to be interested in a region that is rich in tech-savvy young workers, said William Frey, author of the study and a Brookings senior fellow.

“Yet, while millennial education was likely an important element in the considerat­ion of Amazon finalists, an examinatio­n of these locales suggests it was not the only condition for their advancemen­t in the competitio­n,” he said

That should give Atlanta at least some tentative reassuranc­e.

Amazon has said that it will invest $5 billion in the new headquarte­rs, which will employ more than 50,000 people.

The company has officially narrowed its search from 238 bids down to 19 U.S. cities — including Atlanta — plus Toronto.

Brookings did not rank Toronto as part of the study about millennial­s.

But among the 19 American met-

ros competing for the headquarte­rs, Boston ranks first, with 59 percent of its millennial­s holding at least an undergradu­ates degree, followed by Washington, New York, Raleigh and Denver.

More than one-third of all millennial­s have college degrees, said Frey. “However, the cream of the millennial crop is not evenly spread across the landscape,” he said.

In 28 large metros, fewer than one in three millennial­s have college degrees, he said.

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