from 24/7WallStreet:
College Graduates Are Really ScrewedPosted: September 24, 2010 at 10:59 am
Attention college seniors: it’s an awful year to graduate college. Anyone with a brain knows that given the state of the economy but the Brookings Institution recently spelled it out in frightening detail.
For these young adults just entering the labor market for the first time, the impacts of the recession will last well into the future. According to one study (Kahn 2010), young people graduating from college during today’s severe recession will earn approximately 17.5 percent less per year than comparable peers graduating in better labor markets. This lower wage effect is highly persistent, fading away only after 17 years of work.
What does this mean in terms of lost income? For the average college graduate this year, this translates into approximately $70,000 (in today’s dollars) in lost earnings over the next decade. For the 2008, 2009, and 2010 classes combined that amounts to over $330 billion in lost earnings over 10 years. The projected losses are even larger for graduates who cannot find a job upon graduation.
It’s even more depressing when you consider that graduates with student loans carried an average debt of $23,200 in 2008, up 25 percent from 2004. The figures probably have worsened since then as unemployed parents were no longer able to provide for their children’s education. Graduates of professional and graduate schools often have six figure debt loads.
Young people have been hit especially hard during the economic slowdown. Unemployment among workers aged 16 to 24 is at record levels. Older, more experienced workers are now willing to do entry-level jobs that the young people had expected to get following graduation. That situation will not improve much until the economic turnaround finally happens. .........(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://247wallst.com/2010/09/24/college-graduates-are-really-screwed/#ixzz10kWNUAYc