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Education as a financial investment

There's a claim that higher education is the best investment today. If so, what discipline of higher education gives the best value?

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When life presents a challenge, take your shot.

I know that getting an MBA, a second or third degree in Engineering, law school or med school... these are the most worth it.  Good luck!


Posted 7 months ago ( permalink )
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This article will give you some figures based on a 1996 study. Then I also gave you a link to a more recent study that is very interesting.

 


How much is higher education worth in cold hard money? A college master's degree is worth $1.3 million more in lifetime earnings than a high school diploma, according to a recent report from the Commerce Department's Census Bureau.


The report titled "The Big Payoff: Educational Attainment and Synthetic Estimates of Work-Life Earnings" (.pdf) reveals that over an adult's working life, high school graduates can expect, on average, to earn $1.2 million; those with a bachelor's degree, $2.1 million; and people with a master's degree, $2.5 million.


Persons with doctoral degrees earn an average of $3.4 million during their working life, while those with professional degrees do best at $4.4 million.


"At most ages, more education equates with higher earnings, and the payoff is most notable at the highest educational levels," said Jennifer Cheeseman Day, co-author of the report.


The figures are based on 1999 earnings projected over a typical work life, defined as the period from ages 25 through 64.


Americans staying in school longer
Along with the financial data, the report also shows that more Americans are staying in school longer than ever before. In 2000, 84 percent of American adults age 25 and over had at least completed high school and 26 percent continued to earn a bachelor's degree or higher, both all-time highs.


"Glass Ceiling" on earnings still intact 
The report also shows that while more American women than men have received bachelor's degrees every year since 1982, men with professional degrees may expect to cumulatively earn almost $2 million more than their female counterparts over their work lives.


Additional highlights from the report show:

    • In 1999, average annual earnings ranged from $18,900 for high school dropouts to $25,900 for high school graduates, $45,400 for college graduates and $99,300 for the holders of professional degrees (medical doctors, dentists, veterinarians and lawyers).

    • Over a work life, earnings for a worker with a bachelor's degree compared with one who had just a high school diploma increase by about $1 million for non-Hispanic Whites and about $700,000 for African Americans; Asians and Pacific Islanders; and Hispanics.

    • Currently, almost 9-in-10 young adults graduate from high school and about 6-in-10 high school seniors go on to college the following year.


A separate report released last year (What's It Worth? Field of Training and Economic Status: 1996) said among people with bachelor's degrees, those working full time in engineering earned the highest average monthly pay ($4,680), while those with education degrees earned the lowest ($2,802) in 1996.

 

 

Here is a great study on higher education, it is in pdf form, scroll down a page or two and there is a great graph that will give you a very good understanding of the differences in the levels of earnings based on a degree.

http://www.collegeboard.com/prod_downloads/press/cost04/EducationPays2004.pdf 

 

Good luck and best wishes. 


Posted 7 months ago ( permalink )
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Making a long story short going into graduate school in the fields of law or any of the High Tech subjects (Electrical engineering, computer programing, etc.) and combining them with a masters in business or in any of these fields usually proves to be quite lucrative. The point being that once you're in a work place you also have the professional ability and the managerial ability as well to move up in the ranks no matter where you work.


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