College grads who studied this one subject have the 'safest route to the upper-middle class in America today'
When The Economist was creating its first-ever college rankings, it excluded vocational and trade schools.
The decision makes sense because schools for specific professions tend to be considered in isolation. Few people have to choose between one mechanics' school or another, or two competing culinary schools.
Plus, a number of these specialized schools wouldn't have fit the list's emphasis on four-year programs.
However, before culling these schools from their data, The Economist's authors highlighted an interesting trend: "filling prescriptions behind a drug-store counter is perhaps the safest route to the upper middle class in America today."
The three schools that would have dominated the rankings, had they been measured, were all schools that train students to become pharmacists. Ten years after entering undergraduate programs:
- Alumni from the Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences made a median salary of $110,600,
- Alumni from the St. Louis College of Pharmacy made a median salary of $111,600,
- And alumni from the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences (MCPHS) made a healthy median salary of $116,400.
The highest median earnings from a non-vocational college? Ten years after entering college, alumni from MIT brought home a median salary of $91,600 - about $20,000 less than pharmacy school grads.
AP
Better yet, getting into a good pharmaceutical school isn't nearly as competitive as small liberal arts colleges. MCPHS took 89% of its applicants last year.
When you compare salaries for college alumni 20 years out, rather than 10, you would likely get different results, as some career paths take longer to reach their biggest paychecks. In fact, the schools at the top of that list might producing the most anesthesiologists.
- Love in the time of elections: Do politics spice up or spoil dating in India?
- Samsung Galaxy S24 Plus review – the best smartphone in the S24 lineup
- Household savings dip over Rs 9 lakh cr in 3 years to Rs 14.16 lakh cr in 2022-23
- Misleading ads: SC says public figures must act with responsibility while endorsing products
- Here’s what falling inside a black hole would look like, according to a NASA supercomputer simulation
- Nothing Phone (2a) blue edition launched
- JNK India IPO allotment date
- JioCinema New Plans
- Realme Narzo 70 Launched
- Apple Let Loose event
- Elon Musk Apology
- RIL cash flows
- Charlie Munger
- Feedbank IPO allotment
- Tata IPO allotment
- Most generous retirement plans
- Broadcom lays off
- Cibil Score vs Cibil Report
- Birla and Bajaj in top Richest
- Nestle Sept 2023 report
- India Equity Market