Making College Pay: An Economist Explains How to Make the Smartest Investment of Your (or Your Kid's) Life

Making College Pay: An Economist Explains How to Make the Smartest Investment of Your (or Your Kid's) Life

  • Downloads:3967
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-05-19 16:31:05
  • Update Date:2025-09-07
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Beth Akers
  • ISBN:0593238532
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

A leading economist makes the case that college is still a smart investment, and reveals how to increase the odds of your degree paying off。

The cost of college makes for frightening headlines and politics。 The outstanding balance of student loans is over $1。5 trillion nationally, while tuitions continue to rise。 And with most students currently attending classes remotely from their dorm or childhood bedrooms, we have to wonder: Is college really worth it?

From a financial perspective, the answer is yes, says economist Elizabeth Akers: the average college graduate earns a million dollars more over their lifetime than someone without a degree。 And the most elite 4-year colleges deliver 15 percent return on investment--double that of the stock market。 Moreover, despite all the horror stories about burdensome student debt, most graduates actually owe very little in monthly payments, relative to their income。

Yes, college is expensive。 But when we look at college for what it is - an investment in future opportunities, job security, and earnings - Akers argues, we see that the price isn't the problem: it's the risk that your investment might not pay off。 In Making College Pay, she shows how to stack the deck in your favor by making smart choices about where to go, what to study, and how to pay for it。 Readers will learn:

- Why choosing the right major matters more than where you enroll
- The best metric for picking a college (hint: not prestige, selectivity, or ranking)。
- Why borrowing is often best, even if you can afford to pay outright。
- How to hedge your bets by unbundling the college experience, or transfer your risk using tools like income-sharing agreements

Full of practical advice for students and parents, Making College Pay reminds us that higher education remains an engine for upward mobility and prosperity in America。

Download

Reviews

James (JD) Dittes

Deciding on college is the biggest decision of a young person's life: social, intellectual, economic, and financial。 Yet it is also a decision that is based on some the shakiest of foundations--where/whether parents went to college, beloved sports teams, cool colors, traditions。Beth Akers brings a sober economist's eye to the college application process, minimizing the differences between private and public universities while maintaining a strong focus on the significance of choosing a major tha Deciding on college is the biggest decision of a young person's life: social, intellectual, economic, and financial。 Yet it is also a decision that is based on some the shakiest of foundations--where/whether parents went to college, beloved sports teams, cool colors, traditions。Beth Akers brings a sober economist's eye to the college application process, minimizing the differences between private and public universities while maintaining a strong focus on the significance of choosing a major that will make a college investment pay off for the student and her/his family。Later chapters discuss the types of loans available and offer advice on debt (key idea: have in mind a career that will help you pay them back)。 Drawing on her own experience as a first-year art student at a tony private college who transferred to a public university to major in economics, she provides key appendices with resources that compare colleges and which illustrate the true value of variety of college majors。At a length that families, students and guidance counselors will find useful, this book is an ideal resource for those who are thinking big--trying to match big dreams with financial fears。 I don't think that Akers (or any economist, guidance counselor, or parent) will ever take the emotion, the pride, the ambition, or the many other emotions out of choosing college。 But her book informs and enlightens。 It will make a difference for those who read。Thanks to NetGalley for providing me with an advanced copy of the book in exchange for an honest review。 。。。more