It's time to question college degree's worth

By Walt Gardner

Published: Sunday, Feb. 8 2009 12:18 a.m. MST

An investor walks past the stock price board at a private securities company Wednesday in Shanghai, China. Chinese shares rose for a third day Wednesday as reports of higher bank lending and an easing in a manufacturing contraction suggested an economic revival might be taking shape. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index gained 2.3 percent, or 46.94 points, to close at 2107.75.

Associated Press

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Today's economic downturn has blindsided a generation of young people around the globe brought up to believe that a college degree guaranteed them financial prosperity. Whether in the U.S., China, or in countries in between, graduates from even marquee-name schools are feeling the crunch, prompting many rightly to rethink the value of their education.

In the United States, where higher education is increasingly seen as a right, the unemployment rate among workers with a bachelor's degree or higher reached 3.1 percent in November. While that figure is modest compared with the nation's current overall unemployment rate of about 7.2 percent, it ranks near an all-time high. Analysts predict that the college-educated unemployment rate will exceed 4 percent, which would be the highest since the Bureau of Labor Statistics began tracking unemployment by education level in 1970.

The picture in China is also gloomy. The government reported in late January that the growth rate for the final quarter of last year fell to 6.8 percent, bringing the rate for the full year down to 9 percent — the slowest pace in at least six years. In 2007, for example, China's economy expanded at a robust 13 percent clip. Analysts say growth could drop to 5 or 6 percent this year, the slowest in more than a decade.

As in the United States, students at even China's elite schools are not immune. At Peking University, for example, students preparing to graduate might have received three job offers close to graduation in the past. This year many have been offered none. According to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, an estimated 27 percent of the country's 5.59 million college graduates in 2008 were unable to find jobs. The plight of students is expected to worsen because Chinese universities are increasing enrollment.

Graduates in Spain and England face a similarly bleak picture. Both countries have a record number of degree holders, making for cutthroat competition for jobs. When those with degrees manage to find work, it is too often in fields for which they are overqualified.

Spain hit a 12-year-high unemployment rate of 3 million people in 2008, and England is expected to have 3 million idle by the end of this year. More than 1 million of them are likely to be under 25. In fact, the latest labor-market survey found unemployment growing fastest among 18- to 24-year-olds — precisely the group containing the largest percentage of recently minted degree holders.

In light of the pervasive grim data, some are beginning to ask whether a college degree has been oversold.

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