Going To College:
Average annual cost of a 4-year private college: $26,070Average time to get a degree (4-year private college): 55 monthsUnemployment rate for bachelor-degree holders, 2001: 2.2%
Average income for f/t year-round workers with a bachelor's, 1997 to 1999: $52,200% of Forbes 400 members with college degrees: 66%Average net worth of a Forbes 400 member with college degree: $2.13 billion
Richest self-made Americans with a degree:
Warren Buffett
U. of Nebraska Lincoln, BA/BS; Columbia, MBA
Net worth: $36 billion
Source: Berkshire Hathaway (nyse: BRK.a - news - people )
Steven Ballmer
Harvard, BA/BS; Stanford, MBA, dropout
Net worth: $11.9 billion
Source: Microsoft
John Kluge
Columbia, BA/BS
Net worth: $10.5 billion
Source: Metromedia
Not Going To College:
 
Unemployment rate for high-school grads, 2001: 4.2%Average income for f/t year-round workers with high-school, 1997 to 1999: $30,400% of Forbes 400 members without college degrees: 33%Average net worth of a Forbes 400 member without college degree: $2.27 billion
Richest self-made Americans without college degree:
William H. Gates III
Harvard, dropout
Net worth: $43 billion
Source: Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people )
Paul Allen
Washington State, dropout
Net worth: $21 billion
Source: Microsoft; Charter Communications (nasdaq: CHTR - news - people )
Larry Ellison
U. of Illinois, dropout
Net worth: $15.2 billion
Oracle (nasdaq: ORCL - news - people )
Michael Dell
U. of Texas Austin, dropout
Net worth: $11.2 billion
Dell (nasdaq: DELL - news - people )
Sources: Forbes, Chronicle of Education, U.S. Census Bureau, National Center for Education Statistics
Dropping out of school gets a bad rap in America. Words like "slacker" & "directionless" are usually pinned on dropouts--a word that itself is wrapped in stigma. But the list of the very richest Americans is filled with people who did not finish college.
The idea behind attending college is to increase earnings potential down the road. But for Bill Gates, Michael                                        Dell & Larry Ellison, the ivory tower was getting in the way of their making big $. So they quit.
John Kluge used his time at Columbia to lay the financial groundwork for his business empire--thanks to his out-of-class activities. America's 12th-richest man studied economics & nearly lost his scholarship after getting caught playing poker. By the time Kluge graduated, he’d won 7G--not bad for 1937. And we think that college grad Steve Ballmers probably glad he decided to forgo his MBA at Stanford to help Bill Gates start Microsoft.
Most of the #s in the table above indicate staying in school helps people increase their financial success.       But that conclusion is not necessarily true. Who's to say that if more of the county's brightest young people chose work experience over the pressure to attend an elite (& expensive) u. they--& the world--would not be richer? Our microcosm of America's wealthiest would indeed prove that to be the case: The average net worth of Forbes 400 members without a college degree is 6.6% higher than members with a degree.                     More From Forbes                                                                                                                                                                     Is Yale A Waste Of $? 08.11.03
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