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- The New York Federal Reserve released a labor-market report on college majors.
- The report found that recent graduates with diplomas in six majors were earning less than $40,000.
- Theology and religion was the worst-paying major five years after graduation.
Barry Austin Photography
The analysis, published in February, took into account the earnings of recent college graduates and explored the labor market according to their college major. The New York Federal Reserve's data analyzed the median salaries of graduates aged between 22 to 27 years old in 2021.
The New York Federal Reserve found the six lowest-paying majors fall under social sciences and liberal arts. In comparison, the highest-paying majors are all in STEM industries, which include careers in science, technology, engineering, and math. Notably, chemical engineers took the top spot when it came to high wages, with a median salary of $75,000 five years after graduation.
Take a look at how much the lowest-paying majors are earning, according to the New York Federal Reserve's data. The unemployment and underemployment — "graduates working in jobs that typically do not require a college degree" — rates for each major are shared as well.
Entrants are arranged from the highest median salary to the lowest.
REUTERS/Darrin Zammit Lupi
Median wage, early career: $39,000
Unemployment rate: 7.6%
Underemployment rate: 64%
Graduates of performing arts earn a median wage of $62,000 as a mid-career worker, per the New York Federal Reserve.
According to Indeed, a US-based employment website, some of the careers that performing arts graduates embark on include choreography, which nets a national average salary of $28,289 per year. On the higher end of the market, creative directors earn a national average salary of $75,687 annually.
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Median wage, early career: $38,000
Unemployment rate: 5.3%
Underemployment rate: 58.6%
Graduates of leisure and hospitality can expect to earn $60,000 in their mid-careers, per the New York Federal Reserve.
Some of the jobs undertaken by graduates include assistant general manager, which pays an average of $43,943 annually, and on the higher end, regional manager, which pays an average of $52,669 a year, per Indeed.
Getty
Median wage, early career: $37,400
Unemployment rate: 4.7%
Underemployment rate: 47.6%
Psychology graduates can expect to earn $65,000 at mid-career, per the New York Federal Reserve.
Some of the careers that psychology graduates embark on include therapy, which pays a national average of $67,600 a year, and psychiatry, which pays a national average of $219,482 annually, per Indeed.
According to Niche, psychology was the third most popular major for high school graduates in 2022.
Richard Ross/Juvenile In Justice
Median wage, early career: $37,000
Unemployment rate: 3%
Underemployment rate: 27.7%
Social services graduates earn $52,000 at mid-career, per the New York Federal Reserve.
Careers that social services degree graduates typically embark on include community outreach, which pays a national average of $42,103 a year, per Indeed. On the higher end, therapists earn an average annual salary of $75,019.
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Median wage, early career: $37,000
Unemployment rate: 8.9%
Underemployment rate: 47.9%
Family and consumer sciences graduates earn $60,000 at mid-career, per the New York Federal Reserve.
Some of the jobs family and consumer sciences graduates take on include community service officer, which pays an average of $28,259 annually, and nutritionist, which pays a national average of $41,309 a year, per Indeed.
Square One Media.
Median wage, early career: $36,000
Unemployment rate: 3.6%
Underemployment rate: 35.5%
At mid-career, theology and religion graduates earn a median of $52,000 annually, per the New York Federal Reserve.
Some of the jobs theology graduates undertake include being a pastor, which earns a median salary of $42,936 a year, and missionary, which earns a median salary of $82,268 annually, per Indeed.