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@Poitier needs to come in here and get this work :whew:

The College Majors With The Biggest Lifetime Earnings

  • SEP. 29, 2014, 12:06 PM
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engineering-students-lab.jpg
David Hecker/Getty ImagesEngineering majors top the list of highest-paying degrees.



Students who study chemical engineering as undergraduates will, on average, make the most money of any college major over their lifetimes, earning more than $2 million, according to a new study from The Hamilton Project at the Brookings Institution.

The report — called "Major Decisions: What Graduates Earn Over Their Lifetimes" — tracks data from the Census Bureau to determine which college majors yield the largest financial rewards over a graduate's lifetime. Unsurprisingly, engineering degrees topped the list, while education and arts majors were found closer to the bottom.

However, as The Washington Post notes, "these rankings exclude people with graduate degrees, which leaves out doctors, lawyers, and professors," which explains the potentially low ranking of majors that traditionally go on to law school or medical school.

Overall though, the report reaffirms the importance and value of a college degree. According to the findings, a typical bachelor's degree graduate will earn $1.19 million over their lifetime, about twice what the typical high school graduate earns.

Here's The Hamilton Project's chart of median lifetime earnings by college major, in millions of dollars:

college%20major%20lifetime%20earning%20chart.jpg


Read the full report on college major lifetime earnings at The Hamilton Project >>



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/college-majors-biggest-lifetime-earnings-2014-9#ixzz3FDjSUCJM
Looks like economic, fiance and political science make more than most of the sciences; including biology :sas2:

And fyi @mamba I'm an economics major and had to take business calculus as well
 

mamba

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Looks like economic, fiance and political science make more than most of the sciences; including biology :sas2:

And fyi @mamba I'm an economics major and had to take business calculus as well

That's because biology majors need an advanced degree to do something beyond being a high school teacher with their degree, breh. A chemistry or physics major, on the other hand, has more options than a biology major.

Economics is a good major. Lots of math and data interpretation involved, breh. Both of which are valued skills by a lot of companies. :manny:

I wouldn't have a problem with my seeds studying economics.
 
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