- 10 Mar 2024 06:44
#15307365
Within a year of graduating, about 52% of people who recently earned bachelor's degrees in the US are working jobs that don't require a college education, according to a new joint report by two research firms.
The vast majority of underemployed graduates -- 88% of them -- are working high school-level jobs such as office support, food service, and retail within five years of graduation, per the report by the data research firms Burning Glass Institute and the Strada Education Foundation.
The report was based on a dataset of 60 million people's careers in the US, including those of 10.8 million people with a bachelor's degree.
Its findings present a bleak outlook for new graduates hoping that a degree will guarantee them significantly better opportunities.
About half of America's new college graduates are working in high school-level jobs like food service and retail: report , Matthew Loh, Business Insider, February 22, 2024
https://www.businessinsider.com/half-ne ... obs-2024-2
The vast majority of underemployed graduates -- 88% of them -- are working high school-level jobs such as office support, food service, and retail within five years of graduation, per the report by the data research firms Burning Glass Institute and the Strada Education Foundation.
The report was based on a dataset of 60 million people's careers in the US, including those of 10.8 million people with a bachelor's degree.
Its findings present a bleak outlook for new graduates hoping that a degree will guarantee them significantly better opportunities.
About half of America's new college graduates are working in high school-level jobs like food service and retail: report , Matthew Loh, Business Insider, February 22, 2024
https://www.businessinsider.com/half-ne ... obs-2024-2