FOREIGN UNIVERSITIES OPEN EARNING BUSINESS NOT EDUCATION
The value of university
Where’s best?
New
federal data reveal which colleges do most for their graduates’ pay-packets.
They are not the ones you might expect
AS THE deadline looms on November 1st for the first round of
college applications, America’s annual admissions hysteria is reaching its
peak. It is the first big financial decision young people make, and arguably
the most important. The Pew Research Centre finds that employed college
graduates aged 25-32 earn 63% more than those with only high-school degrees.
But such returns come with ever-greater financial risk: since 1978, tuition
fees have risen three times as fast as inflation.
College is still thought to be the best investment in America.
But that view is based on broad averages, which obscure the differences among
the country’s 7,800 higher-education institutions. Sadly for economists,
students are not assigned to colleges randomly, which makes it difficult to
determine which schools are worth the cost. Are Harvard graduates rich because
they went to Harvard, or would such bright young things have succeeded
regardless of where they studied?
This information void has severe consequences. American colleges
are churning out more degrees than ever, but their graduates do not seem to
have the skills employers want. Since July 2009, growth in job openings has
greatly outpaced the increase in new hires, suggesting that firms are
struggling to find the right workers. And real hourly wages for recent graduates
have actually fallen since 2000, showing that higher education in America today
is no cure-all for the pressures of globalisation and automation.
For individuals, uncertainty about the value of specific
colleges can be ruinous. Some for-profit institutions spend as much as $100m a
year on advertising. Lured by vague claims that are impossible to refute,
students at underperforming universities finance their tuition with pricey
government loans which, even if they go bust, they still have to pay back.
Barack Obama has tried to crack down on bottom-feeding colleges.
In 2013 he unveiled plans to create national ratings and to withhold public
funds from institutions that flunked. Universities protested at the reduction
of their mission to a single number—as one official told college presidents,
“It’s like rating a blender.” The rankings project now appears dormant.
However, on September 12th the Department of Education unveiled a “scorecard”
website with the data it would have used to produce the ratings, compiled by
matching student-loan files to subsequent tax returns.
The new longitudinal numbers have serious flaws. They list
salaries only for ten years after students enter college—too short a span to
capture a lifelong earnings trajectory, yet too far in the past to give an
accurate picture of universities in 2015. They cover only students who got
federal financial aid, excluding those from most well-off families. And they do
not distinguish people who choose not to work from those who cannot find a job.
Yet they still offer precious data for students who want to know which college
to go to, and why.
Get thee to a pharmacy
For readers used to rankings dominated by Harvard, Yale and
Princeton, sorting the scorecard by median earnings of employed graduates a
decade after enrolment may cause mild disorientation. Three institutions are
$20,000 a year above the rest of the pack, and few people have heard of them.
That is because they train pharmacists: the Massachusetts, St Louis and Albany
Colleges of Pharmacy. Many other colleges with unexpectedly high alumni
salaries, like the University of the Pacific in California, also offer pharmacy
degrees.
The scorecard’s age limit stacks the deck in the pharmacists’
favour: whereas 28-year-old surgeons are poorly paid hospital residents,
28-year-old pharmacists are near their peak earning potential. Nonetheless,
filling prescriptions behind a drug-store counter is perhaps the safest route
to the upper middle class in America today. Pharmacy schools take nearly all
comers—MCPHS, in Boston, accepted 89% of applicants last year—and offer nearly
guaranteed six-figure wages within a few years.
Another lucrative, little-known group are the maritime colleges,
which train engineers for careers in the navy, shipping and energy. They
combine rigorous maths with a militaristic lifestyle and hands-on machine work:
at SUNY Maritime in New York, “cadets” spend at least 50 days each summer on a
freight ship. The college accepts two-thirds of candidates, yet its alumni on
the scorecard earned higher salaries than those of Caltech, which admits just
9%.
After excluding trade and vocational colleges like these, two
vaunted names, MIT and Harvard, rise to the top of the earnings rankings. Yet
most students who get into such places end up well-paid no matter what. Two
economists, Alan Krueger and Stacy Dale, have found that graduates of selective
universities do not out-earn those who were accepted by the same colleges but
chose a “lesser” institution. To measure a university’s economic value, you
need to compare the salaries of its graduates with the wages they might have
earned had they studied elsewhere.
That figure cannot be
known for sure, but the scorecard makes it possible to produce an estimate. The Economist has built a model that, for each of 1,308 colleges, predicts the
median earnings in 2011 of employed former students who applied for federal
loans in 2001, based on the characteristics of each institution and its intake.
The model both identifies the attributes shared by universities that produce
lots of rich graduates, and predicts alumni wages for each college. Actual
earnings can then be assessed against this benchmark.
The best predictor of the salaries a college’s graduates will
earn is previous academic achievement, as measured by results on the SAT
aptitude test. The exam is scaled from 400-1,600, but aggregate scores for
colleges range from around 700 to 1,500, because they are averages of hundreds
of individual marks. All else being equal, workers who attended an institution
with average scores of 1,210, the 90th percentile among colleges, make $11,700
more per year than those from universities in the 10th percentile (920).
However, most of the rewards accrue only to tip-top performers. The gap in alumni
earnings between colleges in the 99th percentile of SAT scores (1,415) and the
99.9th (1,485) is $4,600 a year, as big as the gap between the first percentile
(800) and the 20th (962).
The next-most-important factor is the field of study. For all
the hype over STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths), only colleges
packed with engineers and computer scientists tend to have unusually rich
graduates. Alumni of institutions with lots of majors in maths or physical
sciences, and few engineers, do not tend to outperform financially. But
universities that are strong in engineering provide similar economic returns to
those of pharmacy or maritime colleges. Although many are selective, a handful,
such as Capitol Technology University outside Washington, DC, accept a majority
of applicants while still delivering top-decile salaries.
The other field of study that boosts salaries is business.
Although it is no guarantee of wealth, the more business students a university
has, the more money its alumni make. Two Boston-area business colleges stand
out: median earnings at Babson, which requires undergraduates to start a
company, trailed only MIT and Harvard among non-vocational places, while
Bentley boasted the best mark among colleges with SAT scores below 1,150. For
students who want a broader curriculum, Villanova, which accepts half its
applicants, has mandatory courses on professional development, close ties to
big accounting firms and top-tier graduate salaries. “Jobs are what you get for
your money at Villanova,” says Patrick Maggitti, the provost.
As for subjects to avoid, aggregate results from colleges do not
back up warnings about studying the humanities. Graduates from colleges with
lots of majors in English (such as SUNY-Albany in New York) or history (like
Hampden-Sydney, in Virginia) do not earn anomalously low salaries. However,
religious and art schools dominate the bottom rungs of the earnings table.
Although a handful offer good value—the Otis College of Art and Design in Los
Angeles, for example, feeds graduates to toy companies, fashion brands and film
studios—borrowing money to attend Bible or art institutions is usually a bad
idea.
The same caveat applies
to elite liberal-arts colleges (LACs), known for their focus on teaching
undergraduates, whose alumni make less money than those of similarly highly
rated research universities. This pattern may not stem from employer bias
against graduates of LACs, but rather from the aversion of those graduates to
Wall Street: thePrinceton Review’s top-20 lists for political leftism and “reefer madness”, a
who’s-who of economic underperformers, are filled with LACs. At Warren Wilson
College in North Carolina, for example, students run a farm and garden, and
flock to majors in environmental science and creative writing; its median
earnings are just $25,500. Then again, even students who were set on Goldman
Sachs at 18 might opt for the Peace Corps after spending four years absorbing
the works of Karl Marx and Bob Marley at a LAC.
You might expect graduating students
to migrate towards the best job opportunities. However, the data show that
where undergraduates study matters as much as what they study. Both the state a
college sits in, and its nearest city, are relevant: the former reflects the
area to which alumni can easily move, and the latter the strength of a
university’s ties with local employers. The importance of place is hard to
overstate: moving a college from rural Mississippi to San Francisco would
increase its graduates’ expected earnings by $14,800.
Demography makes up most of the
remainder of the model. Predictably, colleges with more men and students with
rich parents tend to have higher alumni wages. Less intuitively, Catholic
colleges do better than average, and Protestant ones worse— a reversal of Max
Weber’s thesis about the “Protestant ethic” underlying the “spirit of
capitalism”. And in a reflection of America’s rainbow future, graduates of
diverse research universities—those with an even split of higher- (white and
Asian-American) and lower-earning racial groups— tend to outperform both black
colleges and lily-white ones. Mixing with many races appears to be good for the
wallet.
Just give me the damn rankings
Together, these factors explain
the vast majority of the gaps between colleges’ alumni earnings. However,
outliers remain where graduate salaries diverge from expectations. Ordering
institutions by how well they transform their “raw material” (students and
site) into “finished products” (workers), the top performer is Washington &
Lee (W&L), whose median earnings of $77,600 exceed the model’s forecast by
$22,000. It is perhaps the country’s least left-wing LAC: the Lee in its name
is the Confederate general, and it flew the Confederate flag until last year.
It has America’s highest share of male students in fraternities, and ranks near
the bottom in receiving federal Pell grants, given to children from poor
families. W&L organises regular trips to New York from its home in rural
Virginia, so that students can be interviewed at banks and professional firms.
No other college combines the intimate academic setting and broad curriculum of
a LAC with a potent old-boy network.
Among selective universities, the median salary of Harvard
graduates ($87,200) beats the model’s already lofty expectation by $13,000 a
year, and the University of Pennsylvania outperforms it by $10,000. However,
elite colleges with merely above-average earnings pepper the bottom of the
rankings. The most surprising is Yale, which comes third in the popular US News rankings but seventh from the bottom by
this measure. Yale’s students are statistically identical to their Harvard
counterparts. Yet its alumni made “just” $66,000 a year—$4,000 less than those
of Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania. Another laggard is Pomona, a LAC
in Los Angeles ranked by Forbes as America’s best college.
Harvard students may well be
more career-driven than cerebral Yalies. And acquisitive applicants might pass
over Pomona—whose president, David Oxtoby, says its students focus “on changing
the world, affecting people’s lives, and having a fulfilling career [more than]
on being compensated for that work”—for its sister colleges, which focus on
STEM (Harvey Mudd) and economics (Claremont McKenna). Still, gaps this big are
hard to explain away.
Perhaps the most useful piece
of data in the scorecard, however, is the list of institutions that lift
disadvantaged students into the middle class. Many of them funnel graduates
into union-friendly public-sector jobs. For example, Texas A&M International
University sits on the Mexican border in Laredo, America’s third-poorest
metropolitan area. Its students are 90% Hispanic, and have bottom-tier SAT
scores. Nonetheless, its listed median earnings are $45,000 a year—slightly
above the national average, and precisely equal to the current first-year
salary for teachers in the local school district, a frequent employer of the
college’s graduates. Another outperformer is Pennsylvania State University’s
Schuylkill campus, which accepts 81% of applicants. Its administration-of-justice
programme offers internships with state police and feeds job candidates to the
FBI.
The moral? State governments
could make few better investments than expanding these overperforming public
universities. That would put even more of their students on the path to upward
mobility.
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