The salary you make straight out of college can define your entire career

The salary you make straight out of college can define your entire career


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An economics professor has found that your salary straight of college sets the tone for the rest of your career — and that your college often sets the tone for your salary. Invited to


address a conference on human capital and mobility hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Swarthmore College Professor of Economics Philip Jefferson used Payscale.com data


collected by John Calia, his student and collaborator, on starting and mid-career salaries from the graduates of nearly 1,000 educational institutions. He wanted to know if it was possible


for someone to move up the income ladder within their lifetime and if that correlates with what college they attended, Swarthmore reports on its News & Events page. He found that if you


only get a bachelor's degree, the college you attend has a measurable effect on how much money you make, both immediately after graduation and for the rest of your working life. As he


puts it, "if you are behind someone early in their career, by the time you get to mid-career, you are still going to be behind that person. And the only way you could have caught up was


by going to a different school." Jefferson explains: "What we showed is that the relationship between early-career pay and mid-career pay is linear and positively sloped. ... Once


you graduate from a school, you were not going to be able to catch up to somebody that graduated from a different school who started with a different pay. "If you start out 10 percent


behind, you are still going to be 10 percent behind mid-career." "The school you attended really matters," he tells CNBC Make It. Certain colleges set up new grads for high


salaries in the short and long term. A bachelor's degree from Harvard, Princeton or Stanford sets you up to make an impressive starting salary, Jefferson finds. Other schools that


produce better-than-average results, according to his analysis, include Bates College, Occidental College and SUNY-Maritime College. Several of those institutions also made CNBC Make


It's 2017 list of the 30 colleges where students go on to make the most money. Schools that produce lower-than-average results, Jefferson finds, include Endicott College, Miami Dade


College, Iowa State University and the Massachusetts College of Art and Design. > If you start out 10 percent behind, you are still going to be 10 > percent behind, mid-career. > 


> Philip Jefferson >  > Professor of Economics, Swarthmore College "I was surprised" by the data, Jefferson says. "Before, I adhered to the view that, if you're


talented, the school doesn't matter." And, he adds, in some cases, that is true. But, largely, it seems clear that the college you choose can make a substantial difference in terms


of how much money you'll be able to make. Given how expensive it is to get a B.A. these days, it makes sense to ask whether you're likely to get a good return on your investment.


Forty-four million Americans have accrued a student loan burden of $1.4 trillion, and recent research shows a majority of borrowers, 60 percent, will still probably be making loan payments


in their 40s. As CNBC reports, "on average, more than 3,000 borrowers default on their federal student loans every day." Bearing that in mind, and knowing what he knows now,


Jefferson would advise high schoolers to "include salary data" in their considerations. "I'd never say look _only _at salary data," he says. But it should be looked


at "as part of a portfolio" of facts about a possible school. _LIKE THIS STORY? LIKE CNBC MAKE IT ON FACEBOOK._ _DON'T MISS: PRESIDENT TRUMP SAYS YOUNG PEOPLE PAY $12 FOR


HEALTH INSURANCE — HERE'S HOW MUCH IT ACTUALLY COSTS _