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Work-Life Earnings by Field of Degree and Occupation for People with a Bachelor’s Degree: 2011

The United States Census Bureau has recently issued a concerning the relationships between individuals鈥 educational attainment, occupation, and work-life earnings (the amount earned over the course of a career). The brief is based on data from the American Community Survey (ACS). As other Census Bureau reports have found, among social characteristics, an individual鈥檚 level of educational attainment is the greatest predictor of earnings.

Among the 鈥檚 findings:

  • Work-life earnings rise in accordance with educational attainment and range from $936,000 for those with the lowest levels of educational attainment to approximately $4.1 million for individuals with a professional degree. The work-life earnings by level of educational attainment are as follows:

Educational Attainment

Work-Life Earnings

0 鈥 8th Grade

$936,000

9th Grade  – 12th Grade

$1,099,000

High School Graduate

$1,371,000

Some College

$1,632,000

Associate鈥檚 Degree

$1,813,000

Bachelor鈥檚 Degree

$2,422,000

Master鈥檚 Degree

$2,834,000

Professional Degree

$4,159,000

Doctorate Degree

$3,525,000

 

  • The work-life earnings between individuals with only a high school diploma and those with a bachelor鈥檚 degree is approximately $1 million, and there is yet another $1 million difference in work-life earnings between individuals with a bachelor鈥檚 degree and those with a doctorate degree.
  • While on average an individual with a bachelor鈥檚 degree will have work-life earnings of approximately $2.4 million, there is great variety in work-life earnings among bachelor鈥檚 degree holders in accordance with major or degree of study and with occupation.
    • Among those with a bachelor鈥檚 degree, individuals majoring in engineering, computers and math, science and engineering-related fields, business, physical science, and social science have higher work-life earnings than the average.
    • Among bachelor鈥檚 degree holders, individuals working in the occupations of architecture and engineering, computer and math, management, business and financial, healthcare practitioners and technicians, sales, and science have higher work-life earnings than the average.
  • Variations in work-life earnings exist among individuals with the same college major and among individuals working in the same occupation. For example, while on average individuals who majored in the arts have lower work-life earnings ($2 million compared to $2.4 million), individuals with arts majors who have occupations in architecture and engineering or management have higher work-life earnings ($2.8 million compared to $2.4 million).

Additional U.S. Census Bureau briefs of interest include:

(U.S. Census Bureau: October 2012).

More 国产视频 the Authors

Celia Hartman Sims
Work-Life Earnings by Field of Degree and Occupation for People with a Bachelor’s Degree: 2011