Does Higher Ed Lead to a Living Wage? It Depends.

Inside Higher Ed

Katherine Knott
February 21, 2024
A new analysis found that more than 1,000 colleges failed to meet a “generous” threshold for postgraduate earnings, raising concern about the return on investment for some students.
Students who graduated from nearly one-fourth of America’s colleges and universities earned less than a $15 minimum wage 10 years later, a new report released Tuesday found.
The analysis of federal data from the HEA Group, a research and consulting agency focused on college access and success, compared the earnings of about five million graduates of 3,887 institutions. It used four metrics—including whether the graduates earned more than the federal poverty line or more than a typical person whose highest level of education is a high school degree—to gauge the return on investment for students. Nearly all of the institutions cleared the poverty-line metric, but more than 1,000 failed the high school earnings test.
“The low ROI of some of these schools begs the question of whether students should be burdened with federal loan debt after they attend,” said Michael Itzkowitz, co-founder of the HEA Group and author of the report. “Many of these schools failed to provide students with a living wage, which makes the ability to pay down their educational debt nearly impossible.”

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