Graduate unemployment


Graduate unemployment, or educated unemployment, is unemployment among people with an academic degree.
Aggravating factors for unemployment are the rapidly increasing quantity of international graduates competing for an inadequate number of suitable jobs, schools not keeping their curriculums relevant to the job market, the growing pressure on schools to increase access to education, and students being constantly told that an academic degree is the only route to a secure future.

Background

Research undertaken proved that unemployment and underemployment of graduates are devastating phenomena in their lives. A high incidence of either are indicators of institutional ineffectiveness and inefficiency. Since the beginning of the economic recession in the US economy in 2007, an increasing number of graduates have been unable to find permanent positions in their chosen field. According to statistics, the unemployment rate for recent college graduates has been higher than all college graduates in the past decade, implying that it has been more difficult for graduates to find a job in recent years. One year after graduation, the unemployment rate of 2007–2008 bachelor's degree recipients was 9%. Underemployment among graduates is high. Educated unemployment or underemployment is due to a mismatch between the aspirations of graduates and employment opportunities available to them.

Investment risk

College and Universities cost thousands of dollars a semester, not including study materials, books, room, and board. Tuition has gone up 1,120 percent in the last thirty years. Students have been given the impression that employers are looking for people who, through tests and grades, have demonstrated that they are high achievers. In many recent surveys, that has been proved otherwise. Employers are looking for people who have learned how to work well with others, and have gained substantial communication skills as well as critical thinking abilities. Graduates are not meeting employers needs. Students are also struggling to pay off their student loans. Without the desired, and needed, jobs graduates are accumulating debt and struggling to pay back their loans. 15 percent of the student borrowers default within the first three years of repayment. Many resort to returning to live with their parents and having to work multiple part-time jobs. Loans average about twenty to thirty thousand dollars. Higher education becomes an investment in which students are expecting to find a job with enough income to pay off the loans in a timely manner. It is an investment that students need to discern whether it will be beneficial or not, and whether it will help to advance their career in the long run.

Graduate unemployment by nation

United States

In June 2013, 11.8 million persons were unemployed, putting the unemployment rate at 7.6 percent. The state of the economy is a large contributor to these numbers. In June, 2001 the unemployment rate was 4.6% After 9/11/2001, the unemployment rate skyrocketed to 5.7% in November 2001 and rose drastically in 2009 to 10% in October. In September, 2015, unemployment is reported by the Labor Department to be at 5.1%. However, some economists dispute that as accurate and claim that unemployment is much higher due to the number of people who have stopped looking for jobs. The lack of jobs available, and skills desired by employers, are beginning to prove to be another major cause for graduate unemployment in the U.S. Graduates are completing school with a degree and a head full of knowledge, but still lack work experience to impress white-collar employers.

Educational attainment in the United States, Age 25 and Over (2009)

College majors sorted by employment rates, wages and graduate degrees

The table below lists data on the unemployment, underemployment, median wages, and graduate degrees of various fields of study, as reported by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the United States Census Bureau, and the American Community Survey, as of 2021. The unemployment, underemployment and early career figures are for recent college graduates.
College MajorUnemployment
rate
Underemployment
rate
Median Wage
Early Career
Median Wage
Mid-Career
Share with
Graduate Degree
Accounting3.3%22.6%$54,000$80,00031.1%
Advertising and public relations4.6%39.2%$50,000$80,00019.0%
Aerospace engineering6.6%27.7%$72,000$112,00049.4%
Agriculture2.4%52.1%$45,000$70,00021.0%
Animal and plant sciences4.4%52.5%$42,000$67,00034.7%
Anthropology6.5%53.3%$40,000$65,00046.3%
Architecture2.1%29.1%$50,000$85,00038.7%
Art history5.3%48.8%$48,000$64,00041.8%
Biochemistry4.7%37.4%$45,000$85,00070.3%
Biology4.7%46.8%$40,000$75,00062.9%
Business analytics2.2%24.8%$66,000$99,00024.7%
Business management5.0%55.1%$46,000$75,00024.6%
Chemical engineering4.1%19.6%$75,000$120,00047.4%
Chemistry3.4%39.5%$47,000$85,00065.4%
Civil engineering3.4%15.1%$65,000$100,00038.6%
Commercial art and graphic design7.9%33.5%$43,000$70,00011.8%
Communication studies5.8%52.7%$47,000$75,00024.2%
Computer engineering3.7%17.8%$74,000$114,00040.0%
Computer science4.8%19.1%$73,000$105,00031.8%
Construction services1.4%17.7%$60,000$100,0009.9%
Criminal justice4.5%71.3%$43,900$70,00024.1%
Early childhood education3.1%24.5%$40,000$43,00040.8%
Earth sciences3.6%38.8%$40,000$70,00043.8%
Economics5.5%35.3%$60,000$100,00042.6%
Electrical engineering3.2%15.4%$70,000$109,00047.7%
Elementary education1.8%15.2%$40,000$48,00049.0%
Engineering technologies7.1%39.6%$62,000$90,00024.3%
English language6.3%48.7%$40,000$65,00047.5%
Environmental studies5.1%50.2%$45,000$68,00032.5%
Ethnic studies4.4%53.7%$45,000$66,00049.7%
Family and consumer sciences8.9%47.9%$37,000$60,00032.9%
Finance4.1%28.7%$60,000$100,00030.6%
Fine arts12.1%55.4%$40,000$65,00023.2%
Foreign language7.8%50.1%$43,000$65,00050.5%
General business5.3%52.4%$50,000$80,00025.2%
General education1.8%22.9%$40,200$51,00050.1%
General engineering5.9%25.3%$60,000$100,00037.0%
General social sciences5.4%50.6%$43,000$65,00038.5%
Geography4.4%44.5%$48,000$75,00032.6%
Health services5.2%45.6%$40,000$60,00051.8%
History5.8%49.1%$50,000$70,00050.2%
Industrial engineering4.6%18.3%$70,000$100,00036.9%
Information systems and management6.4%24.7%$54,000$90,00025.6%
Interdisciplinary studies4.8%46.3%$41,800$70,00037.7%
International relations7.1%49.3%$50,000$86,00045.6%
Journalism6.5%47.7%$45,000$75,00027.0%
Leisure and hospitality5.3%58.6%$38,000$60,00034.1%
Liberal arts6.2%55.2%$40,000$63,00030.0%
Marketing6.6%52.0%$50,000$85,00018.6%
Mass media8.4%51.7%$40,000$75,00021.2%
Mathematics5.8%30.7%$59,000$88,00052.4%
Mechanical engineering5.3%15.8%$70,000$105,00039.2%
Medical technicians5.8%59.5%$51,000$71,00024.6%
Miscellaneous biological sciences6.3%48.6%$42,000$70,00060.9%
Miscellaneous education0.6%16.7%$40,000$56,00056.6%
Miscellaneous engineering3.4%22.9%$68,000$100,00045.8%
Miscellaneous physical sciences5.5%23.2%$52,000$104,00057.1%
Miscellaneous technologies5.9%48.4%$48,000$80,00018.5%
Nursing1.3%10.1%$55,000$75,00029.3%
Nutrition sciences1.8%45.0%$45,000$60,00046.3%
Performing arts7.6%64.0%$39,000$62,00038.5%
Pharmacy4.8%14.7%$55,000$100,00065.1%
Philosophy9.1%57.1%$42,000$68,00056.5%
Physics6.1%34.9%$53,000$80,00069.8%
Political science6.9%49.2%$50,000$80,00053.6%
Psychology4.7%47.6%$37,400$65,00051.0%
Public policy and law7.4%49.4%$45,000$70,00046.1%
Secondary education2.6%27.0%$40,400$52,00051.2%
Social services3.0%27.7%$37,000$52,00052.4%
Sociology9.0%51.3%$40,000$61,00038.3%
Special education2.7%17.7%$40,000$52,00060.7%
Theology and religion3.6%35.5%$36,000$52,00044.9%
Treatment therapy5.7%41.3%$48,000$69,00050.7%
Overall5.1%39.8%$50,000$75,00038.7%