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On average, skipping college and investing tuition costs nets a higher return

739 点作者 qwerty2020将近 8 年前

112 条评论

habitue将近 8 年前
I think a lot of people are looking at this as &quot;maybe this article is offering advice&quot; instead, the way I&#x27;m looking at it is this is giving us a rough quantification of what we all know intuitively: that college is so expensive it&#x27;s reaching a natural ceiling.<p>The way this manifests in reality isn&#x27;t millions of people all doing a cost&#x2F;benefit calculus like this and coming to the rational conclusion they can skip college. What happens is that slowly, the meme that &quot;Jim went to college and he doesn&#x27;t seem better off&quot; seeps into the collective consciousness. More and more people start running into this evidence, and reconsider mortgaging the house (figuratively) to send their kids to college, and the upward pressure on college tuition starts to lessen.<p>After a while this meme that college is a tradeoff becomes well established, and it becomes common knowledge that you think hard about it before you send your kid to college. The underlying reason is something like &quot;You can make a better return in principle investing in the S&amp;P&quot; but the way it becomes a force in the real world is by a collective bayesian reasoning process we all engage in as a society.
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krakensden将近 8 年前
As a culture, we really need to stop telling 17 year olds to not worry about money, go to college, and figure something out. There is always someone ready with a romantic appeal to a classical education, and it is so frustrating for me.<p>Wasting four years is a huge cost. Years, decades of debt is a huge cost. Going to college with no plan about money? The costs are assured.<p>Plus, the degrees people are actually getting aren&#x27;t necessarily worth all that much to the educational romantics. Business administration is what it is.
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sillysaurus3将近 8 年前
How do you skip college and invest the tuition in the S&amp;P 500?<p>Ah, you can&#x27;t: <i>Of course, lenders won&#x27;t give out large loans for an individual to skip college and dump tuition into the stock market, this is just a hypothetical scenario.</i><p>So this article is unrealistic.
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splitrocket将近 8 年前
&quot;Probably the most dangerous thing about college education, at least in my own case, is that it enables my tendency to over-intellectualize stuff, to get lost in abstract arguments inside my head instead of simply paying attention to what&#x27;s going on right in front of me. Paying attention to what&#x27;s going on inside me. As I&#x27;m sure you guys know by now, it is extremely difficult to stay alert and attentive instead of getting hypnotized by the constant monologue inside your own head. Twenty years after my own graduation, I have come 2 gradually to understand that the liberal-arts cliché about “teaching you how to think” is actually shorthand for a much deeper, more serious idea: “Learning how to think” really means learning how to exercise some control over how and what you think. It means being conscious and aware enough to choose what you pay attention to and to choose how you construct meaning from experience. Because if you cannot exercise this kind of choice in adult life, you will be totally hosed. Think of the old cliché about “the mind being an excellent servant but a terrible master.” This, like many clichés, so lame and unexciting on the surface, actually expresses a great and terrible truth. It is not the least bit coincidental that adults who commit suicide with firearms almost always shoot themselves in the head. And the truth is that most of these suicides are actually dead long before they pull the trigger. And I submit that this is what the real, no-bull- value of your liberal-arts education is supposed to be about: How to keep from going through your comfortable, prosperous, respectable adult life dead, unconscious, a slave to your head and to your natural default-setting of being uniquely, completely, imperially alone, day in and day out.&quot;<p>David Foster Wallace: This is Water <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.metastatic.org&#x2F;text&#x2F;This%20is%20Water.pdf" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.metastatic.org&#x2F;text&#x2F;This%20is%20Water.pdf</a>
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whyenot将近 8 年前
Tuition at a California State University is only $5,472 a year. That is pretty darn close to free. Many other state schools have low tuition. Nearly 500,000 students in California attend a CSU. Almost twice as many students as attend a UC school. Yet, in these kind of analyses, these low cost state schools always seem to get the shaft when in fact they educate a tremendous number of students at very low cost.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2017&#x2F;01&#x2F;18&#x2F;opinion&#x2F;sunday&#x2F;americas-great-working-class-colleges.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2017&#x2F;01&#x2F;18&#x2F;opinion&#x2F;sunday&#x2F;americas-g...</a>
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tvural将近 8 年前
This reminds me of Robin Hanson&#x27;s criticism of medical spending - exercise and diet are much better predictors of health than money spent on healthcare, meaning that there&#x27;s a large amount of waste in the system. I suspect something similar here, the amount of money people spend on education is uncorrelated from what they get out of it. The other factors, like whether you went to a top school and what you did in college dominate the ROI. There is a tendency to treat education as an insurance policy, where all you have to do is buy in, and you are somehow protected from falling through the cracks in society. It seems that college as an insurance policy has stopped working if it ever did work, and it exposes a fact that&#x27;s somewhat uncomfortable, you can&#x27;t just pay these colleges money to have your career set, you have to figure out what to do yourself.
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adpoe将近 8 年前
Opinion:<p>Just like the stock market, college is also an investment. There is risk involved.<p>One of the main problems is that this is NOT communicated well. (If it all.)<p>Too many people take on huge long-shot risks that are unlikely to pay off.<p>Yes, if you get an English degree and become a professional writer selling books and screenplays at $1MM a pop -- that&#x27;s an awesome and incredible gig. But not many people can get it. The $30k - $150k for that degree is a very risky investment.<p>On the other hand, spending $30k for a degree in engineering, CS, physics, math, etc... is much less risky. And it&#x27;s a better investment. However--even in this case--maybe it&#x27;s not worth the extra $100k for a private college. Maybe Big State U is good enough, and a safer bet with similar outcomes.<p>When I first went to college, everyone around me said: &quot;it doesn&#x27;t matter what you major in, just get a degree and you&#x27;ll be fine.&quot; They were wrong. It doesn&#x27;t work that way anymore (if it ever did).<p>Communicating this risk&#x2F;reward tradeoff, and what it means for one&#x27;s future, is the source of most college-related money problems.<p>--- Personal anecdote: I have a CS degree, but started out in a liberal arts discipline. So those experiences form my opinions.
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Houshalter将近 8 年前
This ignores selection effects. The kinds of people that go to college would probably earn more <i>even if they didn&#x27;t go to college</i>. It&#x27;s confusing correlation and causation.<p>Even if college does increase earnings some, there&#x27;s societal effects. If we eliminated all college education, employers wouldn&#x27;t be able to rely on that as certification. And so you wouldn&#x27;t have to compete against that if you chose not to go to college.
dsjoerg将近 8 年前
This article doesn&#x27;t explain why we should believe that stockmarket performance, going forward, will be anything like the S&amp;P&#x27;s performance from 1993 to now.<p>It&#x27;s also not clear why we should believe the Payscale College ROI figures. I clicked around a bunch and couldn&#x27;t find any description of their actual methodology for computing it. In particular, before we can take it seriously we need to know how well they&#x27;ve done at estimating the true counterfactual earnings of people who could have gone to University X but did not. And that&#x27;s really hard to do! (Without multiple universes handy)
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iron0012将近 8 年前
There is a massive body of existing literature (the kind that&#x27;s published in peer reviewed journals) examining the returns to education. A lot of that research, maybe most of it, suggests that going to college is a very, very good idea financially.<p>PLEASE, before you let a blog post dictate your position on this issue--and certainly before you recommend to an impressionable 17-18 year old that they not go to college--take the time to properly educate yourself.
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thefourthchime将近 8 年前
TL;DR; Didn&#x27;t go to college, at first people thought it was a liability, but after working my way up people are blown away.<p>Here is my experience:<p>Dad got a masters in Math, couldn&#x27;t get a job, became a Taxi driver and then took 6mo of community college and got a job writing BASIC in the mid 1980s.<p>Dad didn&#x27;t encourage me to go to college, I was a bad student, but taught myself coding and really liked it. Had a C average in high school.<p>Got a job at the small company my dad worked at, got paid $7 an hour, then $14 an hour the next year.<p>Decided I needed to go to college to really make it, put my resume out for fun. Got an offer for $65k to work at Microsoft via a recruiter. This was in 1998.<p>Been working since, learning, making contacts. I make $180k with bonuses now at a Fortune 100 company, I could work into upper management as many have, but I like coding, hate email, hate meetings. I have a Director title.<p>When people hear that I don&#x27;t have a college education they are blown away.
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cperciva将近 8 年前
It&#x27;s even worse than that: Colleges draw their applicants from a pool who are likely to earn above-average incomes to begin with.
jonathankoren将近 8 年前
Only an educated man with a high wage job would come up with this crap. It fit the old template of, &quot;Only suckers do what&#x27;s expected. I&#x27;m too smart for that. Here&#x27;s my plan that conveniently ignores all practicalities.&quot;<p>Putting aside the gatekeeping that prevents non-college educated people into high wage jobs. Putting aside the unskilled jobs have seen real earnings decline over the past decades. Putting aside that skilled non-college jobs actually require post-high-school education. One huge reason why people who don&#x27;t go to college don&#x27;t do this is... (Wait for it...) <i>They don&#x27;t have the money to invest.</i><p>The reason why people graduate from college with a load of debt, is because they didn&#x27;t have the money to pay for college. If they had the money to pay for college, they wouldn&#x27;t have the debt. This is obvious.<p>So where are these people going to get the money to invest? A bank? No one is going to entrust money to a high school grad to invest. For gatekeeping reasons, if no other. Second, why would a bank make such a loan, since they have their own investment arm? This makes no sense, and has no public benefit.<p>We know this doesn&#x27;t work, because you can simply ask your older fry cook at McDonald&#x27;s if they&#x27;re raking in the dough with their investments.
fastaguy88将近 8 年前
This article, and the one it cites, have two serious flaws: (1) Their &quot;ROI&quot; for college is based on some average of high-school earnings. But average high-school only earnings is the wrong number. We don&#x27;t care about what 50-65 year-old union employees with a high-school education are getting today, we care about earnings over the next 20 years for today&#x27;s high-achool, non-college, graduate. That number is dropping, as the number of good paying high-school only jobs decreases. Jobs that a generation ago only required a high-school education now want college (deservedly or not).<p>(2) The distribution of ROI is based on numbers of institutions, not numbers of graduates. There are far more students graduating from large, cheaper, public schools than Harvard or Princeton, but there are many more small private schools in the distribution of costs. But ROI is not based on a distribution of graduates, it is based on a distribution of schools.<p>While it does not make sense to take out large loans to finance poor-paying occupations, and it certainly makes more sense to spend less money on college, these articles are very misleading.
GCA10将近 8 年前
This is a provocative but deeply misleading calculation. It assumes that our no-college-S&amp;P-investor is a stoic enough soul to live on truck drivers&#x27; wages for 24 years, so that the stock market can do its magic, before collecting what genuinely would be a giant windfall.<p>That&#x27;s really hard to imagine. Missing out on the more robust income of a college graduate in your late-20s and early-30s means making sacrifices in terms of the clothes you wear, the vacations you take, the car you drive, the type of person who&#x27;s likely to marry you; your dental care; your children&#x27;s schooling, etc., etc.<p>The temptation to start plucking out money from the S&amp;P honeypot -- in the name of having a better life -- would be fierce. Nothing wrong with that. But if that big knot of savings is used to help pay for a better standard of living at age 25, or 29, or 34, then that means settling for a zero or negative return for that segment of money going forward. Goodbye to the fabled 7.1%.<p>Bear in mind, too, that the stock market doesn&#x27;t deliver 7.1%, year after year, with the happy predictability of a government bond. If your start year was 1999 ... and you waited 10 years to see how you were doing, you&#x27;d be looking at about a 30% drop in your portfolio. (You would have caught both the dot-com mess and the bankster mess.) <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.multpl.com&#x2F;s-p-500-historical-prices&#x2F;table&#x2F;by-year" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.multpl.com&#x2F;s-p-500-historical-prices&#x2F;table&#x2F;by-yea...</a><p>It&#x27;s easy, with hindsight, to say: &quot;Just wait it out.&quot; But at the time, the pressure to get out of stocks is intense. And the anxiety about having bet your lifelong well-being on a market index going haywire would be excruciating.
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Alex3917将近 8 年前
Skipping all of school has even higher returns. If you just invested all the money that would normally go to pay for your K-12 school and college each year, then by age 25 or so you&#x27;d have enough money to retire.<p>The problem is that even if your parents home school you, they&#x27;re generally not allowed to just not pay millage.
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pfarnsworth将近 8 年前
My tuition costs in 1995 were $2500&#x2F;year for an engineering degree. So given the numbers the OP used, he would be wrong.<p>In today&#x27;s environment, however, I might be inclined to agree. When I went to school, I could get a minimum wage job for the summer, and pay for tuition and dorm fees for the year. Education costs are wildly out of whack and something needs to be done to cut down these costs, because at this rate, I will NOT send my two kids to college. I&#x27;ll tell them to open up a business or something, because it&#x27;s simply not worth it.
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roguecoder将近 8 年前
I do notice that this doesn&#x27;t take into account race and gender. The premium White and Asian men get from a college degree are higher than for any other group (citation: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;images.dailykos.com&#x2F;images&#x2F;125386&#x2F;large&#x2F;wage_gap_race_gender_education.jpg?1421852707" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;images.dailykos.com&#x2F;images&#x2F;125386&#x2F;large&#x2F;wage_gap_race...</a>) This could be true for some people but not others, in predictable ways.
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heynk将近 8 年前
Definitely an interesting thought experiment. This article assumes 7.1% annually, and gets that by choosing an arbitrary start and end date of stock returns. In reality, it seems to be more like ~4%, which makes this conclusion much different.<p><a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;interactive&#x2F;2011&#x2F;01&#x2F;02&#x2F;business&#x2F;20110102-metrics-graphic.html?_r=0" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;interactive&#x2F;2011&#x2F;01&#x2F;02&#x2F;business&#x2F;20110...</a>
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IanCal将近 8 年前
An enormous missing part of this seems to be that you are comparing the &quot;return&quot; of something that <i>pays annually</i> and a lump sum result at the end of the 20 years.<p>You&#x27;d need to compare it to an investment where you&#x27;re also withdrawing the difference with the higher salary per year. Or, equivalently for this, have the extra money earned paid into investments each year.<p>Really, part of what this is doing is comparing invested money to non-invested money.<p>Edit - for a quick figure, let&#x27;s assume you&#x27;re getting the equivalent of a 4% annualised return on a $100k investment. That means you&#x27;re earning $219k over the 20 years more, for simplicity I&#x27;m going to assume that&#x27;s an even $11k each year. Our 7% example would be $507k over 24 years, invested all up front.<p>Instead of $219k, we&#x27;re actually at $480k.<p>The two line up once you hit roughly 22 years in the workforce, at 23 you&#x27;re slightly ahead. By 40 years of working, investing upfront is $400k behind, at a little over $2.3M vs ~$1.9M<p>A way of phrasing the question to ignore working &#x2F; etc, is which works out better<p>$X invested at $Y as a lump sum.<p>$Z invested each year at $Y.<p>The question the article appears to ask is the better of<p>$X invested at $Y as a lump sum.<p>$Z kept as cash each year.
alkonaut将近 8 年前
First of all, instead of going all the way to free higher education in one go, try a better loan system.<p>Basically since educated youth is a national interest, set up an authority that lends money to students with <i>very</i> reasonable interest rates and repayment.<p>Interest rate can be set at the inflation level plus a small margin, repayment is set as a fraction of annual income, and the loans should not count against future credit. Remaining debt at 65 is written off and absorbed by the public.<p>This is how I funded my education (or rather, the rent&#x2F;food&#x2F;books as there was no tuition).
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ChuckMcM将近 8 年前
The analysis has a huge gap in that it looks only a pay differences and not at employment differences. The pay gap is large (37K vs 71K) [1] and the unemployment gap is over 2 percentage points [2]. Being unemployed for 6 months wipes out most of the nominal &#x27;gain&#x27; by investing your tuition in equities. (and of course it depends on when you invest etc etc).<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bls.gov&#x2F;emp&#x2F;ep_table_education_summary.htm" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bls.gov&#x2F;emp&#x2F;ep_table_education_summary.htm</a><p>[2] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bls.gov&#x2F;emp&#x2F;ep_chart_001.htm" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bls.gov&#x2F;emp&#x2F;ep_chart_001.htm</a>
bhouston将近 8 年前
Some jobs are only accessible with a college degree (dental hygenist, etc.) If you didn&#x27;t have a college degree you couldn&#x27;t get access to those jobs and you then may have a more competitive job market for those jobs that do not require a college degree. Thus without college there would be more people in the bottom pool of job seekers thus increasing competition and likely lowering wages in that bottom pool, and it will likely raise the wages of those who do have college education when they are seeking jobs that require that degree.<p>It sort of seems like we have too many educated people and not enough good jobs that require that education. That seems like the fundamental problem.
whiskers08xmt将近 8 年前
I wonder how different the ROI is between college degrees. I could see a large number of degrees having practically no ROI, compared to just entering the labor market, while others will be more substantial.
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soup10将近 8 年前
If that isn&#x27;t evidence for capitalism being a joke I don&#x27;t know what is. By all means go to college, get an education, all so vultures can use your brain to enrich themselves while paying the minimum.<p>To say nothing of the finance industry which has made an art of skimming off the top.
rsp1984将近 8 年前
This whole discussion is very US-centric.<p>When looking beyond US borders it turns out you can have it both ways: Get a degree from a very good university without paying tuition fees (or at least not much).<p>For example in Germany international students can study basically for free. It&#x27;s similar in other EU countries and the universities are typically <i>much</i> better than US state universities. I truly wonder why not more Americans are taking advantage of this.
codecamper将近 8 年前
I found that investing in bitcoin has outperformed the average post college job. (I conducted my research by comparing 20,000 invested in a college in 2010 vs 20,000 invested into bitcoin in 2010.)
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cbhl将近 8 年前
I wonder how much of this is just a result of US tuition costs being out of control.<p>Does this analysis hold for coding bootcamps? What about Canadian colleges (say, Waterloo, Queens or Toronto)? What about community college? Restricted to only CS&#x2F;EE degrees? Becoming a doctor? Does it account for the probability of dropping out of various college progams?
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avallark将近 8 年前
The cornerstone of this statistical conclusion is that you will invest the money you will use for college, however the fact is if you try and loan out the money that you need to go to college for any other purpose, that loan will be a lot more expensive that what you would get from a student loan. Also, the chances of you getting that loan is slim.<p>If you already have that kind of money with you and you are going to invest you own money for college then these arguments have a little more statistical weight. However, if you have that kind of money, you are probably already rich and wealthy at which point, you already have a good business&#x2F;income and this delta that you would invest into that business will not yield you significantly more income than what you already have. At this point, its still better to go get a college degree.
davismwfl将近 8 年前
Not saying anyone going to college isn&#x27;t good (I have a son going to college now). But frankly is this really surprising?<p>I have known this for years. I have a college education but NEVER advertise it because it has absolutely ZERO to do with my career. And I rarely have told anyone that I graduated. Even straight out of school I relied on my capability not an education and that capability got me a better job offer at a higher salary then I could have reasonably expected if I claimed a new grad.<p>Not saying school is bad or not worthwhile, there are things I wish I would&#x27;ve taken the time to learn earlier but the reality is at some point it becomes useless compared to if you can do the job. When I hire, I absolutely never care about the education except that if you have one I expect certain answers that if you have experience I wouldn&#x27;t expect.
lazyjones将近 8 年前
- educated people live longer (Harvard study etc. <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cbc.ca&#x2F;news&#x2F;technology&#x2F;educated-people-live-longer-harvard-study-says-1.708657" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cbc.ca&#x2F;news&#x2F;technology&#x2F;educated-people-live-longe...</a>)<p>- the S&amp;P is possibly driven by people who went to college and started companies; if nobody did that, where would it be?<p>- average results tell the individual nothing about his&#x2F;her best choice, so the headline is a bit detrimental. There are successful UHNW entrepreneurs both with and without college degrees and plenty of unsuccessful people with college degrees<p>- note that Payscale uses median pay to calculate ROI from colleges; all extremely successful people with very high incomes are not reflected in the data.
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jondubois将近 8 年前
Our economic system is currently over-delivering on solutions to simple problems and not delivering enough when it comes to solutions to difficult problems.<p>Instead of shifting their efforts towards solving difficult problems (to add value), companies today prefer to focus on already-solved simple problems and to focus on optimizing existing solutions (to capture value from competitors); what that means is that humans collectively spend more effort merely competing against each other (zero-sum games) instead of collaborating to create new value.<p>If companies don&#x27;t invest more money into finding solutions to difficult problems, the skills required to solve those problems will lose value on the marketplace - And by association, the education required to attain those skills will also lose value.
damm将近 8 年前
Unfortunately he might have a good point; but the path he took doesn&#x27;t really show it.<p>It would be more difficult because you should be looking at the cost of education; the average income of the person who has graduated.<p>Unfortunately you will need to do something for each skin color because they discriminate against minorities and other different variations. (Not being straight; too flamboyant, etc)<p>discrimination is a very big thing in America; lots of false sense of entitlement.<p>No need to call it racism; it&#x27;s much bigger than that.<p>&gt; Footnote; I have a form of Autism that makes lenders not want to work with me.<p>Happens in all shapes and forms. If you are a woman or if you are black; if you go to a Chinese banker you will have better luck as a asian or white person.<p>Something we need to work on; it&#x27;s going to take hundreds of years and we need to keep at it.
dingo_bat将近 8 年前
The problem is I don&#x27;t have that money to invest. I&#x27;m going to take a loan, which is only available for college. So the choice becomes &quot;don&#x27;t go to college and earn zero&quot; or &quot;go to college with bank&#x27;s $ and earn a nice salary later&quot;.
dorianm将近 8 年前
&gt; Only ~10% of the ~1250 colleges listed on Payscale generate an average ROI higher than the 7.1% generated by foregoing college and investing that money<p>Most of anything is not great by definition :)<p>It&#x27;s all really funny when schools like 42 are free (42 is a private university in France)
rphlx将近 8 年前
One obvious issue with this post is that it uses historical S&amp;P500 returns from a period of high performance. To be predictive, it would have been helpful to also examine expected future returns for the <i>next</i> 10-20 years, which are generally considered to be lower (based on valuation metrics such as mkt cap to GDP, P&#x2F;B, CAPE10, etc). To put a number on that, perhaps 4-6% nominal, instead of 7%+ from 1993-2017.<p>It would have been helpful to model tax effects as well. Those generally do favor investment over labor, but with a positive first derivative (the top US cap gains tax rates are rising much faster than labor rates, e.g. from 15% to 23.8% from 2012 to 2017).
dkarapetyan将近 8 年前
Went to community college then went to university for upper division classes. I&#x27;d say it was worthwhile investment and was pretty cheap.
rllin将近 8 年前
The price of milk and college tuition have diverged. The quality of neither have increased.<p>Milk is subsidized on the supply side while college tuition is subsidized on the demand side.<p>My biggest gripe with Bernie was his free tuition rant that was scant on details.
hutch120将近 8 年前
There is something seriously wrong with society when accountants run the world. Money is a tool, education provides long term wealth and stability. Providing fuel for people considering skipping collage is very short sighted.
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Glyptodon将近 8 年前
So... I know the author put a note about it being hypothetical, but I think it bears repeating: I don&#x27;t believe that most of us who go&#x2F;went to college would have anywhere near the means to invest what tuition costs if we chose not to attend. Which makes the premise seem only applicable to the wealthy.<p>I&#x27;m far from sold on the necessity of attending college, but befrickenbejeezus, if somebody can study engineering or computer science, get decent grades, and come out with a little debt, it&#x27;s got to beat working multiple minimum wages jobs for the rest of their life.
nfriedly将近 8 年前
The down side of this is that most kids are spending money they don&#x27;t actually have - the loans are for college only, so investing it isn&#x27;t an option.<p>I&#x27;m personally very grateful that I was able to graduate without any debt. Things that helped me included:<p>* Starting at a community college (2 years @ ~$3k&#x2F;yr) then switching to a state school (3 years @ ~$10k&#x2F;yr)<p>* Grants and scholarships that paid for around 1&#x2F;3 of my costs<p>* Money from my parents (~$2k)<p>* Freelancing at $45&#x2F;hr+<p>* Getting married (because the government stopped counting my parents money against me, and so I was eligible for more grant money)
AstralStorm将近 8 年前
On average, US is the happiest country in the world. &#x2F;s<p>Use proper statistics that are geared towards heavy tailed distributions which income adheres to.<p>A good start would be a median.<p>Not too mention pure ROI ignores the fact that on the stock market you lose everything, investing in education is supposed to result in intangibles like <i>gasp</i> better education and adaptability to the market. In other words, lower risk.<p>2% gain for risk of losing everything in one bad go is a bad deal.<p>Of course just like bad investments in the market there are also bad investments in education.
wink将近 8 年前
Totally different data point: I&#x27;ve studied in Germany (Computer Science) and it was basically free (had to pay a few bucks for a few semesters, let&#x27;s say below 3000 EUR in total) - and I still sometimes wonder if it was worth it.<p>Why? I&#x27;ve never worked for a company that had the slightest interest in my CS degree (it&#x27;s a german diploma, roughly equivalent to a MSc). Maybe at some point in the future I&#x27;ll try to work for one where they prefer to tick this box off - but right now in terms of money it&#x27;s been useless. All my coworkers in these companies are paid roughly the same amount, or if not, it&#x27;s different factors, but not the degree. I am also not a recent graduate (2010) but interviews in different companies than the ones I worked on showed a general lack of interest in formal education, but I guess getting an intro by someone working there or knowing you from conferences&#x2F;meetups already helps.<p>But why am I debating? I lost time studying and working part-time where I could&#x27;ve worked full-time already. I don&#x27;t want to question the validity of this CS degree, but I was working as a programmer already before I started.
foolrush将近 8 年前
When all you have is Capitalism, everything is a market.<p>What sort of dark world are we living in where we are discouraging people from studying areas that don&#x27;t have a monitary return on investment?
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Steeeve将近 8 年前
Skip college, invest in stock market.<p>People love to chart out how great it is to invest in the stock market and how historically it generates great returns. Nobody seems to remember everyone around them losing enormous amounts of money whenever the economy tanks.<p>Where were all those 7.1% earnings going when the banks were getting bailed out and people were camping on wall street because their houses were foreclosed? Who pays that 7.1% that everybody wins every year? It must come from tax dollars if nobody is losing any money in the market. Or maybe so much money is being generated from all that business that everything is just dandy and there&#x27;s more money than there used to be. Or maybe the big investment firms are just handing it out to everybody who participates in the market.<p>I don&#x27;t know and I guess it doesn&#x27;t matter. I should tell my kids to forget college and invest instead. They can learn about how it works as they go. Heck, high school is definitely more advanced than when I went. Maybe they teach kids how to invest now. It&#x27;s so easy to make 7.1% every year that I&#x27;m sure the old shop teacher can cover it since they killed the shop program due to lack of funding. I guess the state didn&#x27;t know that you just had to put your money in the market to have it grow 7.1% every year. Someone should let them know.
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prirun将近 8 年前
In 2007, the Fed balance sheet was $858B. From <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.investopedia.com&#x2F;articles&#x2F;economics&#x2F;10&#x2F;understanding-the-fed-balance-sheet.asp" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.investopedia.com&#x2F;articles&#x2F;economics&#x2F;10&#x2F;understand...</a>:<p>&quot;The Fed had assets worth $858 billion on its book in the week ended on Aug 1, 2007 just before the start of the financial crisis&quot;<p>From <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.investopedia.com&#x2F;insights&#x2F;how-will-fed-reduce-balance-sheet&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.investopedia.com&#x2F;insights&#x2F;how-will-fed-reduce-bal...</a>, the Fed now has $4.5 TRILLION in assets. IOW, they have injected $3.6T into the economy by pushing buttons on computers to buy shit from banks so banks wouldn&#x27;t have to keep them on their books and take risks.<p>These extra dollars have created inflation IMO, including higher college tuition. Just to get an idea of scale, M1, the US money supply, is $3.4T as of Apr 2017: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.federalreserve.gov&#x2F;releases&#x2F;h6&#x2F;current&#x2F;default.htm" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.federalreserve.gov&#x2F;releases&#x2F;h6&#x2F;current&#x2F;default.h...</a>
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intrasight将近 8 年前
I think the key phrase is &quot;on average&quot;. If everyone invested in index funds instead researching and investing in individual companies, there would be no market to index. Likewise if everyone did the &quot;average&quot; thing with college - perhaps skipping it and banking the funds (in an index fund), there would be no higher education, and no new companies to bring to market.<p>The only thing worse than anecdotes when making a decision is averages.
cletus将近 8 年前
The real problem here is the culture of telling people how amazing they are without them actually having achieved anything, which is really the basis for the negative views people have about millenials.<p>For example, the hordes of people who chase their dreams of becoming famous by acting, singing or, worst of all, just for being famous (aka the Kardashians). The dark side of all this pops up as many of these people get spit out. Some turn to drugs (I saw a show about meth usage in Hollywood and there were an awful lot of addicts of people who moved to LA to pursue their dream).<p>Not weighing up the cost of college is a big one. It&#x27;s not that college has to have a positive ROI. There&#x27;s something to be said for quality of life and the actual experience but still, we&#x27;re asking 18 year olds to be realistic of how they&#x27;ll pay for this eventually and that&#x27;s a lot to ask of an 18 year old who has been told their entire life to follow their dreams and how amazing they are.<p>It&#x27;s fair enough for something like this post to try and quantify the true cost of college but don&#x27;t that having more money and working as a truck driver is not necessarily a better outcome for that person.
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brians将近 8 年前
Its making some assumptions that don&#x27;t seem right, accounting for people having safety nets, minimum livable standards, and (for ages 16-66) more sweat-equity to invest tomorrow. If all that money&#x27;s going into the stock market, compounding, how do you eat? Don&#x27;t you put some of your higher salary on graduating into the market too?<p>How long will the no-college person spend unemployed, and will they bounce off bankruptcy?
nibstwo将近 8 年前
This is what I did. It worked well (for me). I would recommend it to someone like me. If you are smart and hard working, University or no University you will eventually be reasonably successful in the right circumstances. If you want to do something abstract, like invent or do business, it probably makes more sense to skip University. If you want to do something more professional or conventional, like engineering or medicine, you probably have to do University. For the most part, the implicated disparity is actually priced into jobs. Part of doctors income implicates paying off tons of debt and opportunity cost. Likewise, through compounding, hard work and networking, you can end up with the same net worth by other means. The key is to approach it in a self aware way. People rarely make any decisions on a purely rational basis, why start with University? University is easily reversible. Spend less time worrying about what major you take or college you attend. Spend more time worrying about being self aware, choosing a life partner and taking care of your physical and mental health.
carrja99将近 8 年前
Today this is true more than ever with easy access to tutorials, training videos, etc. What people really need post-high school is a mentor who either is willing to take them under their wing or give them guidance on how to pursue their career.<p>For me, I feel if I had discovered the many mailing lists and irc channels that learned through in high school instead of college I could have saved five years of my time.
moultano将近 8 年前
No mention of discount rate? I don&#x27;t think wages appreciate competitively with the stock market, so time preference strongly biases this.
madsbuch将近 8 年前
In Denmark the cost of a masters degree is negative 45487.64 USD (That is, you get paid). And so it should be (at least!) in all countries.
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3stripe将近 8 年前
I&#x27;d like to hear Mr. Money Mustache&#x27;s take on this.
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ada1981将近 8 年前
Consider an undergraduate program where ~150 people each contributed say $50,000 each to collectively buy a large parcel of land and create their own eco-regenerative village. That would be $7.5 MM dollars.<p>Over the course of a few years they would build micro-homes, permaculture farms, invent, build, hack, create art, take free online courses, host traveling scholars, incubate start-up ideas, etc. They&#x27;d be a self-sustaining techno-tribal commune.<p>After 4 years, they&#x27;d have the skills to live sustainably, work together, and would have basic food, shelter and community needs taken care of <i>for the rest of their lives</i>, and they would be free to invent, create art, do activist work, help other students boot up similar learning communities, travel among other similar villages the world over, etc.
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jxub将近 8 年前
I paid 35EUR for first year of CS here in Spain. Next ones will cost me ~1500EUR (no scholarship assumed). Pretty good deal even then though, to what adds up low cost of living.<p>Maybe get out of the US: Germany, Italy, France, Poland, Spain. Sometimes, the grass may be greener and costs&#x2F;ROI better.
anovikov将近 8 年前
Good; it will result in only the people who are actually likely to make some benefit from the education to get one, not everyone who has money or wishes to get deeply in debt.<p>College education is not for everyone, it doesn&#x27;t pay for the simple and stupid reason that you can&#x27;t buy yourself better brains, or better personality traits. If lower fraction of people go to college, ROI will increase as these will be people better suited to benefit from education, it will also make prices fall due to natural law of supply and demand.<p>It is sad to see a ton of young people wasting best years of their lives for something which is of no benefit for them anyway. I did it too.
luckydude将近 8 年前
&quot;On average&quot;. That includes a bunch of degrees that, while perfectly fine, aren&#x27;t going to generate a lot of money for <i>most</i> people. An english degree, in the hands of the right person, could make boatloads. For most people, it won&#x27;t. The ROI for $200K+ english degree is awful.<p>On the other hand, a CS degree, robotics, genetics, biology (medical), any of those, again, in the hands of the right person, will far outpace the S&amp;P, it has for me.<p>But I can&#x27;t say it enough, the person needs to be<p><pre><code> a) motivated b) reasonably intelligent c) lucky </code></pre> If that sort of person gets a degree and a masters or a PhD, I think the ROI can be better.
bcheung将近 8 年前
One of the other things that will start entering the social consciousness is that a lot of the information (lectures, books) is available online for free.<p>This is especially true for computer science &#x2F; programming.<p>Unless you need hands on access to equipment or to physically interact with people for your chosen field of study, the college format is a very inefficient means learning.<p>The &quot;Cone of Learning&quot; states the best way to learn is (in order):<p><pre><code> - Teach others - Practice doing - Discussion - Demonstration - Audiovisual - Reading - Lecture </code></pre> What does college do the most of? The last 2.
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kebman将近 8 年前
Seems he gently skipped over the fact that getting a job is supposed to be easier if you have college. Thus he would have to take into consideration all those people who can&#x27;t get a job without it, or who would have to accept sub-par employment with low pay.<p>Suppose also that you will only do well in College, and thus be elligible for those well-paying jobs afterwards, if you already did very good at primary school. If we suppose that only pupils with high grades from primary school can &quot;make it&quot; with College, then that would also be another point that I think the article explored only weakly.
nikdaheratik将近 8 年前
As someone who grew up from a poor background, I don&#x27;t believe I was ever given the option of &quot;investing&quot; tuition costs. I did however get both academic and need-based scholarships to go to college. There really wasn&#x27;t much cost-benefit analysis involved there.<p>Also, there&#x27;s the larger question of whether good entry level jobs and investment opportunities are available at the same level if everyone were to start to put money into stocks, or whatever, at the same level they do for higher education. There is undoubtedly a ceiling on investment just as there is one for increased income for higher education.
alexchantavy将近 8 年前
College and academia as a whole is meant for higher learning and knowledge - not necessarily to allow people to make more money. That many higher paying jobs require skills associated with a college education is a side effect.
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somberi将近 8 年前
One of my nephews graduated from one of the Top-5 US universities with a B.S Degree in Computer science, last week. It costed him ~250K USD for the entire course (living expenses, all included). He got an offer from one of the Top-3 tech companies in the Valley and the salary he will be making, makes it possible for him to pay back the entire university expenses in 2-3 years.<p>This is just a small sliver, and I understand this is no way representative of university education. But in this small sliver, it seems like University education is amazing in the value it offers, purely in a dollar sense.
mncolinlee将近 8 年前
We should have a system more like what Thomas Paine advocated. The system he described sounds like Social Security, except it&#x27;s not limited to retirees. He suggested that everyone 21 years old was due a &quot;natural inheritance&quot; for having been dispossessed of land and property which would offer a chance to succeed. Likewise, America should have scholarships available for anyone willing to work hard and learn. If college were free, ROI would be very high indeed.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ssa.gov&#x2F;history&#x2F;tpaine3.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ssa.gov&#x2F;history&#x2F;tpaine3.html</a>
hutch120将近 8 年前
There is something seriously wrong with society when accountants run the world. Money is a tool, education provides long term wealth and stability. Providing fuel for people considering skipping collage is short sighted.
pyrale将近 8 年前
This article neglects the fact that people don&#x27;t get money to gamble.<p>Student loans are, along with home loans and a select few others, the only financial leveraging tools available regardless of one&#x27;s background.
wwarner将近 8 年前
Maybe college is too expensive -- maybe it&#x27;s expensive because there is a very high demand for well educated people. In other words, in my field, computer science, you will meet very few immigrants without a hard won master&#x27;s degree or better. They are paying premium prices for these degrees, and they are getting the jobs that come with them. You can&#x27;t simultaneously argue that the job market is being divided by STEM knowledge and that learning about STEM is a waste of time.
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theprop将近 8 年前
This is a huge, spirited discussion. There was a very similar discussion with many of the same points when child labor was outlawed and education was made mandatory a bit over 100 years ago.<p>All the points against college education made here...they just as easily apply to that case as well. So we should stop funding public schools, invest it in the S&amp;P 500 and start letting 12 year olds maximize lifetime income by beginning professional life early?
nodesocket将近 8 年前
Except that college is more about becoming an adult, making friends, some partying, meeting co-eds, and learning how to learn. The social benefits should not be downplayed.
seasonalgrit将近 8 年前
if the subtext here is that university tuition is much higher than it should be, i agree. but the point of going to college isn&#x27;t merely to achieve a monetary ROI.
jtcond13将近 8 年前
These calculations seem fishy, for reasons stated above and others (e.g. why 20-year ROI? why exclude graduate degree holders?).<p>However, it is true that rising education costs are eating much of the ROI of attendance and lack of transparency has made it harder to see where that crossover point is.<p>But in a world in which the equity and college wage premiums are headed in the directions that they&#x27;re headed, I would not give this advice to an intelligent 18-year-old.
ascendingPig将近 8 年前
Another entry in the already-saturated genre of people who went to college but squandered the educational opportunity telling the rest of us that college is a waste.
dragonwriter将近 8 年前
&gt; On average, skipping college and investing tuition costs nets a higher return<p>Yeah, but you can&#x27;t get grants or subsidized loans to invest, and, anyhow, people go to college because of what it does for their choice of <i>kind</i> of work, not just for financial returns (well, and for non-career reasons, but that is a whole different issue.)
udkl将近 8 年前
The post make a good observation but shouldn&#x27;t be taken as advice.<p>For one, the majority of people will take out a loan to fund their studies. They do not have cash laying around to invest.<p>Second, a very minority of the population, especially when young, has the patience and rigor it takes to be invested through the tantrums of the market over a long period.<p>Third, past performance is not a guarantee of future returns.
wedesoft将近 8 年前
Education should be free to begin with. An educated population ensures productivity and progress. Money is just a means to allocate resources. If the productivity is down because the workforce is not skilled enough to compete, that money is going to be as valuable as the paper it is printed on.
knicholes将近 8 年前
Purely financially I can see how this applies to many people. There are other ways going to college benefits one&#x27;s life &quot;financially&quot;that aren&#x27;t directly visible, like improved health care and possibly a job that doesn&#x27;t wear down your body so quickly (to save on medical expenses later).
mowenz将近 8 年前
Isn&#x27;t it possible to create ultra low-cost, bootcamp-style, world-class degree programs in STEM fields?<p>Self-study on your own an outline provided, then take a highly competitive entrance exam to get into the bootcamp. Finish and get your world class degree.<p>It sounds like the type of non-profit I should invest in if I were a 1%&#x27;er.
gozur88将近 8 年前
For a few years now I&#x27;ve been thinking as a high school graduate you&#x27;d learn far more by taking your college money and starting a business or two. Assuming, of course, you didn&#x27;t want to do something highly technical like medicine, law, or, you know, advanced materials construction.
sopooneo将近 8 年前
I have always assumed that going to college is not necessarily the ideal financial path for any particular individual, but rather that an educated populace is better for everyone. In other words, it is a collective good that &quot;we&quot; have a &quot;liberal&quot; education.<p>And I stand by by that assumption.
Aqueous将近 8 年前
Unfortunately I suspect this ends up being similar to the &quot;paradox of thrift&quot; [1]. It might make sense for one person to do this, but if people did it en masse, it would be catastrophic for our economy and therefore for each of us individually.<p>[1] I learned about the paradox of thrift in college.
waspear将近 8 年前
Some experiences in college is priceless.
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gbersac将近 8 年前
If you don&#x27;t want to invest a lot of money in tuition and want to learn programation, I went to the 42 school which is free and it made me an excellent programmer : <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.42.us.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.42.us.org&#x2F;</a>
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anothercomment将近 8 年前
Funny, as I have sometimes thought of going to college as a kind of counterargument to the efficient market hypothesis. Since going to college or not is an investment decision, it seemed that going to college is obviously the better decision. Except, apparently it isn&#x27;t.
ggh5将近 8 年前
Problem: college tuition is too damn high.<p>Solution: universal, free or heavily subsidized access to quality higher education.<p>So, Americans, number 1 war economy and slaughterous rulers over our blood and minds, what exactly is your major political malfunction preventing this?
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swsieber将近 8 年前
I&#x27;m surprise nobody had mentioned tulips.<p><a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;slatestarcodex.com&#x2F;2015&#x2F;06&#x2F;06&#x2F;against-tulip-subsidies&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;slatestarcodex.com&#x2F;2015&#x2F;06&#x2F;06&#x2F;against-tulip-subsidies...</a>
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solomatov将近 8 年前
The problem is that keeping this investment and not spending it on useless things like new car, fancy apartment, designer clothing, etc, requires very large willpower. So, psychologically, it makes sense to get an education, and find some job.
hasenj将近 8 年前
University degrees are absolutely necessary for medicine, law, and STEM fields.<p>For everything else, going to University makes no sense at all IMO.<p>Yes, philosophy and linguistics are interesting subjects, but not worth spending tens of thousands of dollars to major in.
AdamN将近 8 年前
I went to grad school in the middle of a startup. Probably cost me a million dollars. I learned so much, met great people, and met my future wife. I wouldn&#x27;t have made a different decision any day of the week.
elmar将近 8 年前
The true value of a college education is intangible.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;getyarn.io&#x2F;yarn-clip&#x2F;f7f7e126-8aac-40bc-9478-70b6beab3902" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;getyarn.io&#x2F;yarn-clip&#x2F;f7f7e126-8aac-40bc-9478-70b6bea...</a>
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musikele将近 8 年前
I would suggest to US citizens to come in EU, study in the best colleges (there are some that are just great and cheap) and come back. I expect the exepence to be half. At that point the ROI should be greater
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Animats将近 8 年前
Only about half of new college graduates are getting jobs that require a college education. We&#x27;ve passed &quot;peak school&quot;.<p>On the other hand, not going to college sucks even worse.
xux将近 8 年前
So where can I borrow $250,000 for me to invest in the stock market?
bpodgursky将近 8 年前
If this was actually true, there would be no private college loan lenders -- they would all prefer to invest their money in the S&amp;P 500 than in college students.
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apapli将近 8 年前
I&#x27;d rather see a median figure than an average.<p>A single ultra successful person&#x27;s income will make up for a full suburb of people who are struggling using averages.
totony将近 8 年前
I just graduated college and I tell all my friends not to go to higher education since 2 years, I dont think any of them listened to me...
mbrodersen将近 8 年前
However moving to Germany for a few years and getting a free top quality University degree is even better. And yes it is free for non-German students.
leoplct将近 8 年前
As you have considered the cost of financing for your tuition you should consider the cost of financing for invest in the stock market.
pjmorris将近 8 年前
Shouldn&#x27;t the analysis account for the value of S&amp;P 500 companies managed and operated by people without college degrees?
shmerl将近 8 年前
That assumes people have saved costs to invest. In practice, people can avoid accumulated debts, not saved costs.
vladletter将近 8 年前
Maybe we could finally take the problem at its origin and make tuition free for people. Education is a right.
RoutinePlayer将近 8 年前
Would love to hear from non Americans on this, especially folks from countries where public colleges are free.
matthewhall将近 8 年前
Yeah but... Lots of Americans don&#x27;t have the money too pay for college until after they graduate.
5706906c06c将近 8 年前
What about entering the workforce, make enough to cover cost of living, and then go back to college?
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RandyRanderson将近 8 年前
I&#x27;ve long suspected this and am gland someone did the calc.<p>I&#x27;d love to see the breakdown by major!
diefunction将近 8 年前
however, people are actually losing money in the stock market (Not everyone will buy s&amp;p 500 and hold for many years).
randyrand将近 8 年前
The previous title was better. Why was it changed?
Mc_Big_G将近 8 年前
...and a terrible job for 40+ years
ld00d将近 8 年前
a) College isn&#x27;t a vocational school. b) It should be free.
评论 #14487809 未加载
gravypod将近 8 年前
I&#x27;m a Junior in college and I initially thought college wasn&#x27;t worth it by the numbers. I was going here because.. well... I had no idea what to do. I&#x27;ve now come around.<p>College is absolutely useless unless you find every possible way to waste every other student&#x27;s money on things you want to do. The education you&#x27;ll get is going to be sub-par (unless you&#x27;re going to a big-5), the professors are short tempered and provide poor service, and you&#x27;re going to have to learn a hole bunch of things you honestly don&#x27;t give a crap about.<p>At my college you need to take Calculus 2 to be able to take Linear Algebra..... If you follow the standard course layout you&#x27;ll probably be taking Lin on your Senior year. This is after 2 courses in discrete math where you apply Lin!<p>It&#x27;s a joke. It&#x27;s a fares. We all know it&#x27;s BS. But it&#x27;s worth it if you take advantage of every single service.<p><pre><code> 1. Use your college email to get software 2. Use your college email to get hardware (starving artist discount) 3. Take advantage of internal funding to do research you want to do. 4. Start clubs in your subject area. (My college provides $700&#x2F;semester for each club!) 5. Talk to, and get to know, all of your good profs 6. Talk to, and get to know, researchers 7. Take advantage of student discounts (Amazon Prime, etc). 8. Your school will likely give you a laptop discount 9. Find the IT gift shop (trash room). Free hardware! 10. Find a job on campus if you otherwise have nothing to do. </code></pre> So far, in my 2 full years of school, I&#x27;ve presented research findings at an international conference, funded my own research from an internal grant solicitation, obtained piles and piles of cheap software and hardware, I&#x27;m attempting to upgrade my Thinkpad to one of the new x260&#x2F;x270s via a school program, and my next project is to start a Retro-Computer Club at NJIT.<p>I&#x27;m starting this club because I don&#x27;t have $700&#x2F;semester to spend on old hardware nor do I have the space to store old hardware in my shoebox apartment. You know who does? My school! Hopefully by my senior year I&#x27;ll have created a mini-museum for the rest of the students. I&#x27;ll have to brush off my old OS kernel I started and re-read my copy of Operating Systems Implementation and Design.<p>Unfortunately not every student can do all of these things. With my school&#x27;s tuition being 20k&#x2F;year I&#x27;m easily milking 5 to 10k&#x2F;year back out of the university. If everyone did this then the money pot would run dry.<p>If you&#x27;re not going to use everything you&#x27;re paying for, you&#x27;re getting ripped off. Classes aren&#x27;t worth 5k&#x2F;year, let alone whatever you&#x27;re being charged.
killin_dan将近 8 年前
Obvious epiphany to be had here is that you cannot use the government to subsidize your investment in S&amp;P. At least not legally, and to my knowledge.<p>At college, you can live a pretty comfortable life. You get a place to live, food to eat, work to do, material to learn, friends to talk to, supervisory staff to help you with hard problems, etc.<p>I hate to say it, because I think US higher education costs are absolutely ridiculous, but I still think that higher education is more rewarding than working a salaried job for a couple years to dump some money into S&amp;P. I&#x27;d even go so far as to argue that people who have graduated a college or university are more likely to be prepared to safely, responsibly handle problems that occur in the real world moreso than someone who just happens to have a lot of money from S&amp;P. I know that&#x27;s a bit vague, but I think my point is clear enough that having wealth is not a replacement for having a satisfactory, stimulating wealth of knowledge and a sense of purpose for one&#x27;s life. Not to knock people in finance, I love finance, but it&#x27;s not for everybody and if the whole next generation of college students just decided to structure their whole lives based on how much money they&#x27;re LIKELY (ie, not necessarily guaranteed) to make, then it&#x27;ll be a boring generation that the next one has to learn from.<p>Student loan debt regulations need a rethink. How can we: a) not lose money from paying for kids&#x27; school<p>b) not fuck kids over, incurring hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt for admittedly mediocre education (compared to some euro schools, or asian schools)<p>c) keep new system automated enough to reduce politician&#x27;s potential for corruption by manipulating the money<p>and d) provide some sort of transition schedule to move current students (paying traditional loans off) to new system, without fucking over agencies&#x2F;firms that are rightfully owed<p>???<p>We owe our kids better solution than this
ryan-allen将近 8 年前
Is it just me or isn&#x27;t this absolutely disgraceful?
vacri将近 8 年前
Yes, if you invest your tuition and <i>never touch it</i> for a quarter of a century, you&#x27;ll have mildly more money than if you went to college. In the meantime you&#x27;ll be doing... what... to put food in your mouth and improve your lifestyle? Civil engineering interests you? Oh well, here are some schlub jobs for you to do to wait out your quarter-century maturation.<p>And as we can&#x27;t help but hear, so many students are complaining about their student loans. For these people, what is the P&amp;L statement going to look like after not touching their tuition for 24 years? It&#x27;s not usually a winning strategy to borrow money for long-term investment...