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Graduates¡¯ salary premium

<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ class="standfirst">People of working age with a master¡¯s or PhD earn on average ?9,000 a year more than those with only a bachelor¡¯s degree, according to data from the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills
January 15, 2015

Bachelor¡¯s graduates are also ?9,000 better off than those without a degree. The median salary for graduates aged 16-64 is ?31,000 compared with ?22,000 for non-graduates. Those who have completed postgraduate courses, meanwhile, have a median salary of ?40,000, according to graduate labour market statistics for the third quarter of 2014.

But for young people aged 21-30 the premiums for a bachelor¡¯s degree, master¡¯s or PhD are not quite so high. Young graduates earn about ?6,000 more than non-graduates, for example, and those with postgraduate qualifications in that age bracket earn ?3,500 more than bachelor¡¯s graduates, according to the data released in December.

holly.else@tesglobal.com

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