The optimism in the room is real, earned, and a little hard to reconcile with the statistics when you walk through any American university’s May graduation ceremony. You’ll see the auditorium full of families wearing pressed clothes, the stage covered in institutional colors, and the line of graduates waiting to pick up a credential that most of them paid between $40,000 and $200,000. The value of the degree they are obtaining has decreased since their parents’ graduation. Not worthless. Just less measurable and documentable.
A bachelor’s degree is no longer the dependable anchor for professional employment that it once was, according to the Burning Glass Institute, and Goldman Sachs analysts have observed that the earnings premium associated with having a degree over not having one has shrunk to its smallest margin in recent memory. These are not observations from the periphery. The higher education system hasn’t given these institutional research findings enough consideration.
Once you see it, the erosion’s mechanism becomes clear. A credential ceases to be a differentiator and becomes a baseline when it is sufficiently widespread. In the middle of the 20th century, the high school diploma experienced precisely this shift: companies started requiring college degrees for positions that had previously just required a diploma, and the credential’s premium dropped as near-universal completion rates were attained.
The bachelor’s degree is going through the same cycle, but at a quicker pace. The labor market has responded by raising the bar, requiring graduate credentials for positions that previously only required an undergraduate degree and demanding specialized certifications or verifiable technical skills that general liberal arts education seldom offers. Approximately 40% of American adults now hold four-year degrees.
Graduates are most viscerally affected by the experience paradox. When you look at entry-level job postings in marketing, operations, project management, or data roles, you’ll see that the requirements usually call for two to five years of professional experience. This requirement is both typical and genuinely strange when it comes to positions that are specifically marked as entry-level. The grads who did everything correctly—finished their degree, possibly completed an internship, and graduated on schedule—are the ones most impacted.
The university did not prepare them to bridge the gap between the two states; they are qualified in the sense that the degree suggests and disqualified in the sense that the posting demands. “I have the degree, I just can’t get the job that was supposed to come with it” is a common conversation among people in their mid-to-late twenties, and it’s difficult to ignore.
The counter-movement that is gaining steam in this setting is neither unexpected nor particularly complex: in an increasing number of disciplines, trades, vocational programs, and specialized certificates are providing superior returns on time and financial investment. In the majority of US metro areas, entry-level degree-requiring white-collar jobs pay less than the starting salaries of electricians, plumbers, and HVAC technicians, and they do so without taking on student debt.

In a clear drive toward skills-based hiring, IBM, Google, and Apple have all eliminated four-year degree requirements for significant job categories. The corporate rhetoric surrounding this change is cautious and proactive. The practical meaning is less diplomatic: employers are becoming more ready to express this explicitly, and the credential’s signaling role is diminishing.
It’s yet unclear if this is a cyclical shift that will reset once the supply of degree holders stabilizes or if it signifies a long-term structural shift in how American labor markets value educational qualifications. It is more difficult to argue that the four-year degree’s implied social contract—attending college, finding employment, and achieving middle-class stability—has deteriorated in ways that neither colleges nor students can ignore. The optimism at the graduation ceremony is genuine. However, the debt is also lurking in the parking lot.
