September / 2001
From The Editor

Education really does pay

I read a lot of survey results on a lot of different subjects. I'm enough of a numbers nerd that no matter the topic, I always flip to the back for the lists of general statistical information to see how different groups of people compare with each other in all kinds of ways.
The one thing that most dramatically and clearly jumps from the figures is that the more education you have, the more money you will earn.
Survey after survey, year after year. Statisticians call it a positive directly proportional relationship. That is, the dollars you earn rise in direct proportion to your years of schooling. If you draw a positive direct correlation on a graph, it's a straight line, heading up at a 45-degree angle. That's just the way it is with education and income.
The Kentucky Long-Term Policy Research Center offers more detailed proof in its study, "Education and the Common Good-The Social Benefits of Higher Education in Kentucky."
The report finds that a man with a four-year college degree will earn $357,000 more over his lifetime than a high school graduate. A woman will earn $158,000 more (the difference between those, I presume, could be the subject of a whole other study).
The report revealed several other benefits. People with college degrees have less use of public assistance programs and are less likely to spend time in jail. College graduates give more to charity, spend more time volunteering, read to their children more often, and are more familiar with computers and the Internet.
The study concludes that those benefits don't mean that investments in higher education are better than spending on other programs, but that the numbers "demonstrate in concrete terms a portion of the overall value to society of Kentucky's commitment to raising the education level of its citizens."
The report can be found through the Internet at www.kltprc.net/IndexToReports1.htm.

Paul Wesslund
Editor