Amid Pandemic, Millennials Increasingly Believe Their Student Debt Wasn’t Worth Their College Education

Authored by morningconsult.com and submitted by speckz

Among all adults who have had student loans, the share who said college was worth their debt fell 7 points from last year, to 54%.

The share of millennials who say college was worth their student loans dropped 10 points from March 2019, to 46%.

26% of millennials who have had student loans say college “definitely” wasn’t worth their student debt.

A new series from Morning Consult takes a deeper look at how the coronavirus pandemic could permanently alter millennials’ behavior and how, in turn, that could impact the economy at large. The data is drawn from a poll of 4,400 adults, including 1,287 millennials.

As the coronavirus pandemic roils the job market, millennials are increasingly deciding that their college experience isn’t worth the student debt they took out for it.

Since the economic standstill brought by pandemic-related shutdowns, the unemployment rate has shot up to 8.4 percent and initial jobless claims rose to 870,000 for the week ending Sept. 19. And the relief to consumers offered earlier in the pandemic in the form of enhanced unemployment benefits and stimulus payments looks unlikely to re-emerge, with talks in Congress over another economic stimulus package indefinitely stalled.

All this has added up to a more bleak labor market compared to the last time Morning Consult tested attitudes on student debt and college.

At the time, more than half (56 percent) of millennials who took out student loans said that doing so was worth attending college. That poll was conducted March 13-17, 2019, about a year before the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

In a new survey conducted Sept. 8-10, roughly six months into the pandemic, that share has dropped 10 percentage points: 46 percent of millennials said their student debt was worth attending college.

SyspheanArchon on September 29th, 2020 at 18:26 UTC »

"Just get a STEM degree, it'll be fine."

4 years later...

"*Except Biology lol, have fun with that worthless sheet of toilet paper."

Jake129431 on September 29th, 2020 at 16:22 UTC »

We really need to reexamine schooling in the U.S. the pressure to attend college is immense, from the parents and the teachers, yet we dont really prepare the kids, or give them many opportunities to experiment/explore the field they're thinking about getting into. Everyone knows what degrees will make money but not many people know what degree they'd enjoy before getting into college.

Not that it is perfect, but I've often admire Italy with the way that children begin having their educations personalized to the fields they are thinking of going into around the time of middle school, so that by the time you're applying to college you know what you would like to receive a higher education in /you've already had the chance to experience it a little.

This generalized education up until 12th, then saying, "alright pick a college and a degree" is what results in so many people ending with degrees they don't find valuable or even interesting. Meanwhile a vocation school may have been better for them, but they were told they "had to go to college".

steveinbuffalo on September 29th, 2020 at 15:35 UTC »

I wish they defined millenials in the article.. too many places call gen Z etc millenials