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College grads still earn more than workers with no university degree. This map shows the states with the widest salary gaps.

May 14, 2019, 19:56 IST

Andy Kiersz/Business Insider

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In light of the soaring cost of four-year college, leaders in education and business suggest Americans rethink the need for universities to find a good job. But at least for now, data suggests having a college degree pays more in the long run.

Tim Cook recently made headlines for stating that you don't need a degree to be successful. Cook put his money where his mouth is: the CEO revealed about half of Apple's new hires in 2018 did not have a four-year degree.

Cook isn't the only one encouraging people to think beyond a bachelor's degree to find a good job. Trade schools have touted the high wages blue-collar work can yield, including six-figures for heavy-equipment technicians.

Read more: Apple, Google, and Netflix don't require employees to have 4-year degrees, and this could soon become an industry norm

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Even students of four-year colleges themselves feel that a university education wasn't worth the cost, a recent survey finds. College is more expensive than ever - and students are going into record debt to pay it off.

While skipping college may seem like a cheaper option, data suggests earnings for college graduates far exceed wages for those with less than a bachelor's degree. A Business Insider analysis of US Census data finds that in every US state, earnings for college graduates exceed the earnings for those with less than a bachelor's degree. Even in North Dakota, the state with the least difference in earnings, college grads still earn 38% more on average.

We made the above map using data from the Minnesota Population Center's 2017 American Community Survey Integrated Public Use Microdata Series. Using individual-level survey responses from that data set, we found estimates for median total annual personal earned income for people with at least a bachelor's degree and people without a bachelor's degree in each state. The map shows the premium for college graduates as measured by the percent difference in median earnings between college grads and non-grads.

Some of the most expensive states have the largest differences between college grads and non-college grads. Washington, DC, has the highest pay disparity, with a 167% difference in earnings. California and New York follow closely behind with a 133% and 103% difference, respectively.

Separate data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics finds on average, workers who hold at least a bachelor's degree earned more than the $932 median weekly earnings for all workers in 2018.

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Since college pays off in earnings, yet the cost keeps many potential students out, politicians like Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders have proposed making public schools tuition-free.

NOW WATCH: I stopped drinking coffee for a week and I'm never doing it again

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