Every year, millions of students graduate believing they’ve secured their ticket to stability in America. A bachelor’s degree, after all, has long been seen as the safest investment in uncertain times. And in many ways, that belief still holds true.
But beneath the broad reassurance lies a more complicated reality: not all degrees carry the same weight in the job market.
A recent analysis by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York puts hard numbers to what many young graduates quietly experience. Looking at Americans aged 22 to 27, the researchers compared unemployment rates and median wages across different majors, both at the start of careers and years later. The takeaway isn’t that college isn’t worth it. It’s that the field of study can dramatically shape how that degree plays out.
The bigger question: Is the payoff equal?
On the whole, college graduates still earn more than those without a degree. That “college premium” hasn’t vanished. Over time, the salary gap tends to widen in favour of degree holders.But the New York Fed’s findings show that outcomes vary sharply by major. Two students may sit side by side at graduation, but their financial futures can look very different depending on what they studied.
That’s where the conversation shifts, from whether to go to college to what to study once you’re there.
The careers that deliver stability
Some fields continue to offer a relatively smooth landing. Take aerospace engineering. With an unemployment rate of just 2.2%, graduates in this field earn a median $85,000 early in their careers. By mid-career, that climbs to $130,000. It’s one of the strongest combinations of job security and earning power in the data.Accounting tells a similar story of steadiness. Unemployment sits at 2.6%, with early-career pay around $68,000 and mid-career earnings reaching $97,000. It may not be glamorous, but it is reliable, and reliability has value.
Even agriculture, which rarely headlines discussions about lucrative majors, shows an unemployment rate of just 1.4%. Graduates start at about $56,000 and move up to $80,000 mid-career. The field demonstrates that solid outcomes aren’t limited to tech-heavy sectors.
But in the world of business and data, business analytics students can expect to earn $72,000 in the early years and $109,000 in mid-career, with only a moderate 5% unemployment rate. And analytical abilities remain a highly prized asset.
And then there’s biochemistry, with an unemployment rate of 2.7%, earning $52,000 in the early years but escalating to $100,000 in mid-career. Of course, not all degrees are created equal, and some require patience.
Where the road is harder
Other majors have tougher roads ahead, especially in the early years. Anthropology majors have an unemployment rate of 7.9%, one of the highest in the survey. Early salaries are a low $45,000, increasing to $65,000 in mid-career. It’s not that there aren’t opportunities, but perhaps they’re just not as plentiful or straightforward.
Art history majors have an unemployment rate of 6.7%, with early salaries also at $45,000. But in mid-career, salaries jump to a surprisingly high $91,000. Maybe the early years are rough, but the potential for growth is there.
Architecture majors have an unemployment rate of 6.8%, earning $60,000 in the early years and $91,000 in mid-career.
What this really means
The numbers from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York don’t declare winners and losers. They don’t suggest that one path is inherently “right” and another “wrong.” Passion, purpose and talent matter deeply. But the data do highlight something important: academic choices have measurable economic consequences.
An unemployment rate difference of five or six percentage points can translate into months of job searching. A $30,000 gap in starting salary can reshape loan repayment timelines, housing decisions and long-term savings.
A college degree still opens doors. That hasn’t changed.
What has changed, or perhaps become clearer, is that the name of the major on that diploma can influence how quickly those doors open and how wide they swing.
