The Palm Beach Post

Your new dream job is in the field of ... actuarial science?

Such majors make $109K on average, with few jobless.

- By Riley Griffin

Taking on student debt is a financial risk, but those who study such risks are best positioned to pay it off after graduation.

A Bankrate.com report released Monday ranked actuarial science — the formal term for the study of insurance — the most valuable college major. Actuarial-science majors earn an average annual salary of $108,658 and have a better-than-average unemployme­nt rate of only 2.3 percent. And at a time when student debt has hit a record high, these graduates are less likely to incur the added expense of additional schooling and delayed earning potential. Fewer than 1 in 4 graduates pursues advanced degrees.

“The actuarial science profession is interestin­g because students don’t need advanced degrees to gain livable wages, but instead are certified through a series of exams overseen by the industry’s profession­al organizati­ons,” said Bankrate. com analyst Adrian Garcia in an interview. “Students typically pass one to two of these exams while in school and then go on and complete others while working, earning raises and bonuses as they pass.”

The study ranked 162 majors with labor forces of at least 15,000 people based on average annual income, employment status and whether those graduates went on to pursue a higher degree within 12 months. Income accounted for 70 percent of the weighted ranking, unemployme­nt for 20 percent, and career paths that did not demand additional education for 10 percent. The data were derived from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2016 American Community Survey.

Recent actuarial-science graduates are entering the industry at an opportune moment. The U.S. property and casualty insurance industry took in $18 billion in net profit, even as the country sustained heavy losses from natural catastroph­es such as hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria, according to the National Associatio­n for Insurance Commission­ers. But that number is expected to increase in 2018 thanks to favorable interest rates, shows the S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce report. Healthcare premiums are also on the rise as many insurers seek double-digit percentage increases in monthly costs for individual medical plans in 2019.

Science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s degrees continue to offer the best postgradua­te prospects to college students, the study found. Zoology, nuclear engineerin­g, premedical programs and applied mathematic­s dominated the five most valuable degrees, offering graduates low rates of unemployme­nt and six-figure salaries.

But the prospect of a high salary doesn’t always win out. Petroleum-engineerin­g graduates boast the most lucrative average salary, topping out at $124,448, but fail to crack the top of the list because of an excessivel­y high 7.9 percent unemployme­nt rate.

The only students faring worse than fine arts degree holders are niche fine arts degree holders: Graduates with degrees outside the traditiona­l buckets of art, theater, music or creative writing earn the second-lowest average annual salary of $40,855. At a whopping 9.1 percent, they also have the highest unemployme­nt rate of any major.

“At the end of the day,” Garcia said, “you have to balance being practical and following your passion.”

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