Economics graduates are in the money
Anyone considering an Economics degree will find good news in research announced this week by the Institute for Fiscal Studies. It is a massive study, looking at what 260,000 university graduates in England are earning, ten years after graduating.
The IFS found “substantial” differences in the money people were earning, depending on the subject they took at university. Economists are most likely to be the top earners, by a clear margin.
“Medical students were easily the highest earners at the median ten years out, followed by those who studied economics. […] For males, it is estimated that approximately 12% of economics graduates earned above £100,000 some ten years after graduation; by contrast, 6% of those studying medicine or law earned more than £100,000.
“For females, it is estimated that approximately 9% of economics graduates earned above £100,000 some ten years after graduation; by contrast, just 1% of those studying medicine and 3% of those studying law did so.”
The researchers recognise that some of these differences are due not to the degree itself but the type of people who apply for the degree. Even taking this into account, Economics (as well as Medicine) leads to “much higher earnings” than expected. One way to see this is to compare Economics students against those with similar A-Levels who took a creative arts subject.
For economics, male graduates earn a premium of £14,000 at the median over those in creative arts, and female graduates a premium of £20,000.
One of the paper’s authors, Anna Vignoles of the University of Cambridge, is reported as saying,
“The research illustrates strongly that for most graduates, higher education leads to much better earnings than those earned by non-graduates, although students need to realise that their subject choice is important in determining how much of an earnings advantage they will have.”
Thanks to Prof. John Sloman for turning the IFS figures into a handy chart, which you can view or download from the link above.
Link: press release from the IFS and the full paper.
October 10th, 2016 at 4:08 pm
[…] The Market Inspector blog has posted an infographic to answer the question “what degree subject is most likely to get you hired with a good salary?” Using data from emolument.com, they found that economics comes out top of subjects taken in the UK, going by average salaries five years after graduation. This won’t be a surprise if you’ve read our previous posts on the topic. […]