Attention Economy


Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Is it Worth Getting a Master's Degree?

Master’s Programs Are Cash Cows for Universities. Do They Pay Off for Students?
https://www.aei.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/RPT_-Schneider-Masters-Programs-Are-Cash-Cows-Aug-2024-final.pdf
Mark Schneider (American Enterprise Institute):
The absolute increase in lifetime earnings is the average gain in income between students completing the degree and the counterfactual earnings of similarly situated students without the degree. Incorporating the time spent getting a master’s degree, the cost of obtaining the degree, and the probability of completing a program generates an “adjusted ROI.” Taking these costs into account drastically reduces the return to the student—and puts the return for master’s degrees dead last. [But] Averages Hide Lots of Information. Business is the single largest field of study for master’s students; but, on average, business master’s degrees have a negative ROI. But graduates from the top performing programs—including Dartmouth, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of Pennsylvania— can earn millions more than graduates from other business programs. Students who choose badly could experience a negative ROI of over $1 million. Even in computer science, the field with the highest overall ROI, graduates from some programs experienced negative ROIs.