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by bengebre
5515 days ago
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Here's the unemployment rate data by education level in chart form: http://www.deptofnumbers.com/unemployment/demographics/ It's interesting to observe the structural nature of these series. At no time (in the visible history of the chart) does the unemployment rate of a higher education level exceed the unemployment rate of a lower education level. Through recession, recovery and expansion, education looks to be a verifiably sound strategy for increasing your employment prospects. Also worth noting (from the original link) is that the labor participation rate (employed + active job seekers as a fraction of the population) is higher as education levels increase. You're more likely to be working or looking for work the more education you have. Lower education levels have greater rates of people not working and not looking for work. |
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Seeing this chart broken out by, say, parental income and assets would be interesting.
I'm not trying to make the absurd point that education is useless/bad, just that this is heavily conflated with all sorts of age/race/class confounding factors. The factors that might lead to outcomes like "less that a high school diploma" or "_some_ college" include things that won't be great for employment either - chaotic home life, illness or disability, requirement to care for illness/disability, being a participant or a victim in crime, drugs or alcohol abuse - or having parents that are affected by these factors.
Not wanting to be too snarky here, but a lot of posts (not yours, specifically) on inequality and social problems here on HN take on a unpleasant tone of undergraduate geek self-congratulation - "how _smart_ I am to be getting a degree with teh computers, if only all those poor people were as hard-working and clever as I am".