U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of 
Commerce News

EMBARGOED UNTIL: 12:01 A.M. EDT, JULY 18, 2002 (THURSDAY)


                                
Mike Bergman                                           CB02-95
Public Information Office
(301) 763-3030/457-3670 (fax)
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e-mail: pio@census.gov                       Quotes & radio sound bites


Census Bureau Report Shows 'Big Payoff' from Educational Degrees
                                
  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, according to a
report released today by the Commerce Department's Census Bureau.

  People with doctoral ($3.4 million) and professional degrees ($4.4 
million) do even better.

  "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 Big Payoff: Educational Attainment and 
Synthetic Estimates of Work-Life Earnings [PDF].

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

  In 2000, 84 percent of American adults age 25 and over had at least
completed high school and 26 percent had a bachelor's degree or higher,
both all-time highs.
  
  Some additional highlights:

    - 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.

    - Men with professional degrees may expect to cumulatively earn almost
      $2 million more than their female counterparts over their work 
      lives.

    - More American women than men have received bachelor's degrees every
      year since 1982.

    - 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.

  The work-life earnings data were collected in the March supplement to
the Current Population Survey for 1998-2000. The data regarding earnings
by specific degree fields were collected as part of the 1996 panel of the
Survey of Income and Program Participation. Statistics from all surveys
are subject to sampling and nonsampling error.
  
                                
                              -X-


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: July 18, 2002 at 08:46:21 AM

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