A College Degree Doesn’t Guarantee a Good Job: Gary Shilling
By Bernice Napach | Daily Ticker – Fri, Aug 10, 2012Anyone who has a kid in college knows that August can be the cruelest month. That's when the bill for the fall semester is due and usually it's higher than the bill for any previous semester.
Over the past decade college tuition and fees have been increasing much faster than the rate of inflation. The average annual cost for tuition, fees and room and board is $38,600 for a private 4-year college and $17,000 for a public 4-year college (for out-of state residents it's $30,000), according to
the College Board.


"The middle class is getting squeezed on college costs," economist Gary Shilling tells The Daily Ticker in the accompanying video.
At the same time, college graduates are having a tough time finding work. A recent analysis of government data conducted by Northeastern University and the Economic Policy Institute for the Associated Press found that roughly 1.5 million, or 54% of recent college graduates, were either unemployed or underemployed — working at jobs that do not require a college degree. That compares to 41% in 2000.
"Going to college doesn't guarantee a good job," says Shilling, president of A. Gary Shilling & Co. "A lot of people are coming out of college with huge student debt yet have no marketable skills."
Given the rising cost for college and the smaller payoff, families may ask: Is college worth it? Many say it is.
Earnings for college graduates are more than double that of high school graduates over a lifetime, according to the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. The unemployment rate for people 25 years or older who graduate from college is 4.3% compared to 9.3% for high school graduates, according to the latest data from the U.S. Labor Department.
"We may be in a state now where people looking at the costs are beginning to say is this really worth it?" Shiller asks. He says expect an "agonizing reappraisal of going to college."
More from The Daily Ticker
Student Loan Bill: "Failure Is Not an Option" Says Education Secretary Duncan
Higher Education Is a Bubble, Bennett Says: U.S. Govt. Should Stop Subsidizing Student Loans
Student Loan Debt Is A "Ticking Time Bomb": Here's How To Deal With Your Bills
Student Loans Could Be the Next Housing Bubble: Robert Reich
No comments:
Post a Comment