First-Generation College Graduates Lag Behind Their Peers on Key Economic Outcomes
College graduates without a college-educated parent have lower incomes and less wealth, on average, than those with a parent who has a bachelor’s or higher degree.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
College graduates without a college-educated parent have lower incomes and less wealth, on average, than those with a parent who has a bachelor’s or higher degree.
The challenges of a COVID-19 economy are clear for 2020 college graduates, who have experienced downturns in employment and labor force participation.
In 2019, there were 58.3 births for every 1,000 women ages 15 to 44 in the United States, down from 59.1 in 2018.
Roughly 9.6 million U.S. workers lost their jobs during the COVID-19 downturn; only about 2.6 million EU workers lost jobs in this period.
Black and Hispanic workers remain underrepresented in STEM jobs compared with their share of the U.S. workforce.
Here’s how the COVID-19 recession is affecting labor force participation and unemployment among American workers a year after its onset.
The higher education pipeline suggests a long path is ahead for increasing diversity, especially in fields like computing and engineering.
Union membership has had a somewhat unexpected – but likely temporary – turnaround amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The course of the pandemic in India and China will have a substantial effect on changes in the distribution of income at the global level.
The global middle class consisted of 54 million fewer people in 2020 than the number projected prior to the onset of the pandemic.
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