Never before in the United States, we're told, has having a college education been more important for finding a good-paying job. Yet on the other hand, many Americans are critical of the traditional four-year college plan, questioning whether college is worthwhile—if maybe too many kids are going to college these days. Together, these two points of conventional wisdom
suggest that many people nowadays think it isn't worthwhile to have a job that pays well.
I have mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, I am college educated and have done well from it. I went to a traditional school for a traditional four years using a traditional all-expenses-paid-by-my-parents financial plan. I got a degree in computer science, and since then the job market has been, on average, good for people who aren't afraid of computers. So I can't say that my life would have been easier and more materially profitable if I hadn't gone to college. Probably it would have been neither.
But college for me ended eleven years ago. I recently looked at estimated expenses for my alma mater and discovered they've nearly doubled since I graduated in 2001. It's the same story as everywhere else: college costs are steadily growing faster than inflation, and middle-class people are eating the costs. So when is college no longer worth it?
Though this is a subjective question, there's an important objectivity to it; a college education may be assigned a monetary value just as any annuity may be. Suppose a degree allows you to earn $X more per year than you would earn without it. Further suppose your degree costs $Y in direct expenses, plus the opportunity cost of having missed $Z of income for four years while you're busying going to frat parties and playing intramural sports. How much money is that degree worth? For a sufficiently small value of $X combined with sufficiently large values of $Y and $Z, a college degree is worth a negative amount. That is, it pays back less than what it costs to obtain.
All exponential trends fail eventually, and rising college costs will prove no different. However, I wonder if maybe the biggest factor that will cause this trend to fail will be college becoming a (perceived) negative-returning investment for too many people. That is, many people will stop trying to get into college, satisfied instead to take lower-paying jobs indefinitely or else to scrap a good income the old-fashioned way, by learning a trade and running a business doing it. Not that either of these alternatives leads to a cushier life than what follows from muddling through tests and writing clutter-filled papers for four years at an esteemed university, but the universe can be an uncaring place when it comes to one's personal problems.
I pity parents of children today and the education decisions they face. In the next few decades, many families and their would-be college-bound kids will opt out of taking on a lot of debt, instead forgoing college and a better chance of working a higher-paying job in order to come out ahead by earning less. But lost somewhere amidst the dollar figures and stigma of class status of this decision is the subjective, intrinsic value of a good education and the habit of thinking critically about the world.