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Hidden Benefits: The Impact of High School Graduation On Household Wealth

By Bob Wise
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Several recent reports have highlighted the earnings gap between high school graduates and dropouts; however, earnings tell only part of the story. Families rely on income from salary for regular expenses, but real economic security requires accumulated wealth (Conley, 1999; Shapiro, 2004; Hertz, 2006). Household wealth, also known as "assets," is broadly defined as the accumulation of investments that appreciate over time. This wealth may take various forms, including cash investments (savings, equities, 401(k) accounts, and individual retirement accounts), material possessions that hold monetary value (homes, cars, small businesses), and investments in nontangible property such as degrees. Education can be the key to higher earnings, but it is even more importantly linked to the accumulation of assets. Research by Elena Gouskova and Frank Stafford of the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research shows that, on average, households headed by a high school graduate accumulate ten times more wealth than households headed by a high school dropout (Gouskova & Stafford, 2005). In other words, for every $ 500 of wealth households headed by a high school dropout have, their peers with diplomas have accumulated approximately $ 5,000. Based on this finding, the Alliance for Excellent Education has determined that the citizens of the United States would have over $ 74 billion more in accumulated wealth if all heads of households had graduated from high school.

Hidden Benefits: The Impact of High School Graduation On Household Wealth

The Importance of Wealth

Wealth is critical to the economic well - being of individuals and families for a host of reasons. Indeed, wealth is the best gauge of a household's financial security and prospects (Conley, 1999). Yet, according to a recent report by the Ford Foundation, while "fewer than 13 percent of American households live below the official poverty line…more than a quarter live paycheck to paycheck with negligible or nonexistent net worth" (Ford Foundation, 2007).

Perhaps the most important benefit of wealth is the cushion that accumulated assets provide for families that face sudden unemployment, disabling medical situations, or any kind of financial emergencies (Kochhar, 2004; Doron & Fisher, 2002). Regular income helps families pay for day - to - day living expenses; assets allow them to survive financial hardships. But "25.5 percent of all American households had insufficient net worth to sustain living at the federal poverty level for three months if their income were to be disrupted" (Corporation for Enterprise Development, 2002).

Assets matter. Assets mean economic security. Assets mean mobility. Assets mean opportunity.

Corporation for Enterprise Development, 2002

The ownership of assets that can be converted to cash can make the difference between a family's continuing economic viability and bankruptcy, homelessness, or other lasting financial calamity. For instance, families can convert assets to cash to cover living expenses. They can also borrow against assets (e.g., a retirement account) at much better commercial loan rates and with greater ease than those without similar assets.

Accumulated wealth has other long - term benefits. For example, assets can be invested in higher education, which leads to ever increasing levels of income and wealth (Kochhar, 2004; Doron & Fisher, 2002). Families with greater wealth are also more likely to have the resources, time, and educational background to support their children's education, such as fostering the development of reading skills, participating in school activities, and encouraging their children to make ambitious academic choices (Sawhill, 2006; Orr, 2003; Hertz, 2006). The National Conference of State Legislatures notes that "research … suggests positive effects on the children of participants [in asset - building programs], such as improved living conditions, educational opportunities, and positive modeling of savings behavior" (2005).

Wealth also confers other advantages that make further wealth generation more likely. Buying a house in a desirable neighborhood, starting a business, paying for higher education, or funding a comfortable retirement are all ways that families increase their long -term financial security and improve the financial prospects for themselves and their children (Mishel, Bernstein, & Allegretto, 2006).

The capacity to improve financial prospects for one's children and grandchildren is the most enduring benefit that wealth offers. Young people who have resources for college costs, professional training, housing, or starting businesses have significant advantages over their peers. They are better able to absorb the opportunity costs of education or internships that strain personal finances but have powerful impacts on later earning power, and they have less debt as they begin their careers and start their own families. Indeed, it is in great part because wealth can be inherited that it has greater impact on individual prosperity than income (Conley, 1999).

Most economists view wealth as a much more important determinant of economic status than earnings because of the long - term advantage it provides in almost every aspect of life (Doron & Fisher, 2002; Oliver & Shapiro, 1995). Both wealth and poverty tend to perpetuate themselves; the effects of wealth are so significant that it can take as long as five generations for the effects conferred by wealth to disappear (Sawhill, 2006).

As individuals and families benefit from greater wealth, so do the communities in which they live. Research indicates that communities benefit from increased homeownership, greater levels of entrepreneurship, and higher levels of educational attainment that come with asset accumulation. Communities also benefit through greater neighborhood stability, increased civic involvement and voting participation, and reduced need for public assistance (Center for Social Development, 2002).

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