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  • Good morning Hank! It"s Tuesday (evil baby Genghis Khan)

  • So last night, long time nerdfighter roxinpunch posted this to her Tumblr:

  • I keep looking through college degrees and the jobs you could land with them

  • and I just keep going back to how overpriced it all is.

  • Is it even worth it?

  • That's a really interesting question, not just to prospective college students,

  • but also to people in their mid 30's still paying off their college loans, so let's examine it.

  • Now of course most people outside of the United States

  • will be like, "Of course university is worth it."

  • "University is free," or, at least, very inexpensive.

  • We also have subsidized education here in the United States,

  • but it's much less subsidized

  • so here, if you live in Indiana for instance

  • Indiana University costs about ten thousand dollars

  • if you don't live in Indiana it costs about thirty thousand a year

  • So is it worth it?

  • Well let's say you spend a hundred thousand dollars on college

  • including like, sixty thousand in student loans

  • With interest you're going to pay about eighty thousand total on those loans

  • So your total college cost will be one hundred and twenty thousand dollars

  • Expect you will also have spent a lot of time

  • writing papers, and attending classes,

  • and going to supposedly epic frat parties

  • that are never actually very fun

  • because even as you're dancing and drinking and talking to vaguely attractive strangers

  • there's this omnipresent, gnawing feeling in your gut

  • that nothing means anything

  • and you feel this endless existential isolation

  • Was that just me?

  • Right, so anyway, you're doing all of that when you might be working

  • That's called "opportunity cost"

  • On the other hand, the eighty thousand dollars that you spend

  • will actually be slightly less than eighty thousand dollars would've been because of inflation

  • I'm gonna ballpark here and just say that your college cost is like $140,000 in this example

  • But then you have 50ish years of labor-forced drudgery to look forward to

  • Now again we have to deal with inflation and stuff,

  • but let's just say that if you make $175,000 more than you would've made,

  • then college was "worth it."

  • So how much in per hour earnings over your career does a college degree have to generate

  • in order to be worth it?

  • About $1.75

  • So over the course of your career, if you make $13 an hour on average

  • when you would've otherwise made $11.25

  • college has paid for itself

  • And so most studies show that on average college is still very much worth it

  • Although I should note that there are some for-profit universities and misleading vocational training programs

  • that probably aren't worth it

  • But assuming you go to a reasonably good, accredited university

  • there are two things that are true:

  • One- it is criminally overpriced

  • Two- it is probably still worth it

  • But Hank, my problem is that calculation assumes that human life

  • is a purely economic phenomenon, which it isn't

  • Let me give you an example

  • As you know, Hank, a long time ago I worked the graveyard shift at Steak and Shake,

  • and I made about $14 an hour on average

  • It was a great job with good benefits,

  • there was even a stock buying program which is why I still own 15 shares of Steak and Shake stock

  • But about once a week at 3 or 3:30 in the morning

  • I'd walk into the bathroom and even though the toilet was fully functional,

  • I'd notice that there was vomit in the urinal.

  • Now Hank, I don't know if you've ever cleaned a stranger's vomit out of a urinal

  • but let me assure you that the most intense games of rock-paper-scissors I will ever play

  • were played to decide who was gonna be on vomit-urinal duty.

  • After graduating from college, I actually made $1 per hour less

  • when I started working as an assistant at Booklist Magazine,

  • but the job was better in every way.

  • I was surrounded by books and people who loved them

  • I had opportunities for advancement,

  • and in 6 years of working there I never once saw vomit in the urinal!

  • Hank, it's been my experience that maximizing income is a hell of a lot less important

  • than maximizing passion and fulfillment in your life

  • both professionally and personally

  • When I was in college, I remember fearing that the dreary grind of adulthood

  • would feature, like, infinitely more existential dread than frat parties had,

  • but the opposite has been true for me.

  • I'm much less likely to feel that gnawing fear of aimlessness and nihilism than I used to be,

  • and that's partly because education gave me job opportunities

  • But it's mostly because education gave me perspective and context

  • Whether you're studying electrical engineering or poetry, college is not finally about maximizing income

  • It's about becoming a better, and more informed observer of the universe,

  • And for me, at least, that's what leads to a more fulfilling life.

  • Hank, in a world where about half of humans live on less than $2.50 a day

  • the opportunity to learn and study in a formal, dedicated way is still a gift,

  • even if it has become a very expensive one.

  • I'll see you on Friday.

Good morning Hank! It"s Tuesday (evil baby Genghis Khan)

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