Inhospitable Job Market to Greet College Graduates
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Snapshots archive.
Snapshot for May 14, 2008.
Inhospitable Job Market to Greet College
Graduates
By Lawrence Mishel and Elise Gould
This month’s crop of new college graduates will confront a more inhospitable job market than their predecessors faced in 2001, the beginning of the last recession.
In particular, wage and benefit trends show that the labor
market for recent college graduates (ages 23-29) was weaker in 2007
than before the last recession in 2001. Inflation-adjusted average
hourly wages for young college graduates were $21.09 for men and
$18.17 for women in 2007 (Figure A). While the hourly wages
for both men and women have ended their steady decline, they have
barely risen and are still lower by about $0.60 for women and $1.60
for men than they were six years ago.
What’s more, a college degree has become less of a guarantee of
receiving health and retirement benefits on the job. Over the last
recession and recovery, college graduates in entry-level jobs
became less likely to receive employer-provided health insurance
and pension coverage.1 The incidence of health insurance
coverage is over 5 percentage points lower than in 2001, and less
than half of young college grads now receive any form of pension
coverage on the job (see Figure B).
The fact that new college grads are doing poorly is a troubling
sign, since those with higher education and more skills required in
the new economy (e.g., computer literacy) are expected to be faring
well. With persistent job losses and rising unemployment expected,
there is little evidence to suggest that the job market will
improve for recent college graduates in the near future.
Note
1. Based on tabulations of March CPS data samples of private wage
and salary earners ages 23-29 with a substantial labor force
attachment, defined as working at least 20 hours per week and 26
weeks per year. Health coverage is defined as being included
in an employer-provided plan where the employer paid for at least
some of the premium.
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