nsacpi
Expects Yuge Games
what has happened to the education premium since 1970
The education premium (usually called the college wage premium)—the wage advantage of people with a college degree over those with only a high-school diploma—has gone through three distinct phases since about 1970.
From about 1980 onward:
Skill-biased technological change
The key historical insight:
The modern U.S. class structure—where a bachelor’s degree strongly separates income groups—is largely a post-1980 phenomenon.
If you want, I can also show you something interesting economists discovered: the education premium used to be very high around 1910, then fell for 70 years before rising again after 1980. That long cycle explains a lot about U.S. inequality history.
The education premium (usually called the college wage premium)—the wage advantage of people with a college degree over those with only a high-school diploma—has gone through three distinct phases since about 1970.
1. 1970–1980: The premium was relatively modest
Around 1970, the wage advantage of a college degree was much smaller than today.- College graduates earned roughly 40–60% more than high-school graduates.
- In some years during the late 1960s and early 1970s the premium even declined slightly, partly because the supply of college graduates was growing quickly.
- Strong unions
- A compressed wage structure
- Manufacturing jobs that paid relatively well even without college
2. 1980–2000: The premium rose dramatically
This is the big structural change.From about 1980 onward:
- The college wage premium rose rapidly.
- It increased from about 50% in 1979 to roughly 90–100% by 2000.
- By 2000, a typical college graduate earned about double the wages of a high-school graduate.
Skill-biased technological change
- Computers increased demand for analytical and technical workers.
- Manufacturing jobs moved abroad or faced wage pressure.
- Decline of unions
- Falling real minimum wage
- Demand for educated workers grew faster than supply.
3. 2000–present: The premium stabilized (very high but no longer rising quickly)
Since around 2000:- The premium has leveled off at historically high levels.
- It generally fluctuates around 80–90% higher wages for college graduates.
- Wage inequality within education groups (especially among college graduates) has increased.
- So the college vs. non-college gap is no longer the main driver of inequality growth.
The long-run picture (very simple summary)
| Period | College wage premium | Trend |
|---|---|---|
| 1970 | ~40–60% | Moderate |
| 1980–2000 | ~50% → ~100% | Rapid increase |
| 2000–2025 | ~80–90% | High but stable |
The modern U.S. class structure—where a bachelor’s degree strongly separates income groups—is largely a post-1980 phenomenon.
If you want, I can also show you something interesting economists discovered: the education premium used to be very high around 1910, then fell for 70 years before rising again after 1980. That long cycle explains a lot about U.S. inequality history.