Summer Jobs Are Not In Fashion

By R. Siva Kumar - 10 Aug '15 15:17PM

Why aren't summer jobs profitable enough, anymore?

In 1981-82, the average full cost to attend a college was $2,870, including tuition, fees, room and board.

In those day, the Pell Grant award for the government's free tuition help totaled $1,800. Hence, the student would be facing a shortfall of just $1,000, according to npr.

When $3.35 an hour was the minimum wage at the time, making $2,820 got them to work 842 hours. For a good part-time job for nine hours a day, three months.

It's different today.

"The minimum wage has also gone up more slowly than the cost of college. It's $7.25 an hour. At that rate, a student would have to work 1,771 hours to get by. That's 34 hours a week, every week of the year. To cover today's costs with just a summer job, a student would have to lose a little sleep, working almost 20 hours a day for three straight months. And that would still leave no money for books, travel home, pizza or a trip to the movies."

Things are worse this year. The total of tuition, fees, room and board for students in the four-year public universities is $18,943. The Pell Grant is just $5,730, so the student would have to make up $13,313.

Hence, the student needs to put in 35 hours a week, for over 90 days.

It doesn't need rocket science to tell you the basic facts---the student wouldn't be sleeping much, and if they work so hard, they wouldn't be able to study much-or perhaps none at all. What is the point of earning at all to pay studies, then?

That's why students take so many loans nowadays.

TAGSsummer jobs, Pell Grant award, summer jobs not profitable
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