Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

What's the ev for going to college once you factor in graduation rates?

People that get two or three years of college debt and no diploma have a big hole to fill and a small shovel.

Anyway, I think ev isn't the right tool to model gambling behavior; dollar utility isn't linear. It's more about a small spending for a large potential. But then you get into repeated small wagers and such.



College graduates make over $1 million in their lifetime compared to high school graduates.

> Anyway, I think ev isn't the right tool to model gambling behavior; dollar utility isn't linear.

You're right. The more money you have, the less utility it gives you, which makes gambling for a windfall an even worse decision. Worse still if you include taxes.


I always thought those numbers were dubious because you are mostly comparing people who are capable of getting a degree with those who aren’t.


What about college dropouts?


> What's the ev for going to college once you factor in graduation rates?

Very positive (IRR ~9%). It's been studied extensively: https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/server/api/core/bitstrea...


If I borrow a lot of money to start a business and then don't start the business I would also be in the hole. So, don't do that?


you can always go back and finish later...that's what I'm doing.


My school expires credits after 7 years.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: