College-Educated Families Earned $242,200 While Others Made $42,200, Here’s Why the Gap Widened

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By David Beren Updated Published

Quick Read

  • The headline number showing a historic 37% surge in net worth is technically not wrong, yet it masks a split that runs in the opposite direction for tens of millions of households. See how averages mislead →

  • Minimum wages rose and the labor market tightened, yet one group's median income still dropped. The reason has less to do with wages than with what wages don't measure. Explore the income mechanics →

  • The mean and median for the same group can tell completely opposite stories, so reading the wrong one puts your household in the wrong place on the income ladder. Compare mean vs. median →

  • Asset ownership shows up in the income data in a way most people don't account for, which is one reason the credential gap widened even when paychecks were rising. See how assets widen the gap →

  • Many financial professionals are salespeople paid on what they push, not whether you end up wealthier. A fiduciary is the opposite. The SEC legally requires them to put your interests first. Advisor.com's free matching tool pairs you with vetted fiduciaries from firms like Vanguard, Empower, and Edelman — in under three minutes. See who you match with today.

College-Educated Families Earned $242,200 While Others Made $42,200, Here’s Why the Gap Widened

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The headline story of the post-pandemic recovery was a strong rebound in household finances. The Federal Reserve’s 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances showed median net worth surged 37% between the 2019 and 2022 surveys, the largest jump in the survey’s modern history. The income story underneath that wealth figure looks very different. Almost all of the gains went to households with a four-year degree, while families at the bottom of the credential ladder saw their incomes fall in both nominal and real terms.

The Fed’s data makes the split unusually clean. Mean income for college-educated families rose 18% to $242,200 over the three-year survey window. Families headed by someone without a high school diploma went the other direction, with mean income falling 8% to $42,200 and median income falling 10% to $32,300. The Fed’s own summary notes that “increases in both median and mean income were essentially fully concentrated among families with a college degree.”

Why the Average and the Median Tell Different Stories

The mean is sensitive to outliers, and if 10 households earn $50,000 and one earns $5 million, the mean shoots up while the median stays at $50,000. That distinction matters for reading the SCF data. The 18% mean income gain for college-educated families was driven by the top of the distribution, where the largest dollar increases were concentrated. The Fed reports that families in the top income decile saw a 22% mean growth rate, compared with 8% for the bottom quintile. The headline recovery was real, but it was concentrated.

For households without a college degree, the median is the more useful number. A 10% drop in median income for families without a high school diploma describes the typical experience inside that group rather than an outlier effect. The same is true on the other end: college-educated families saw broad gains across the distribution, so both their mean and median moved up together.

The Credential Premium in the Data

The Fed frames educational attainment as the exception to an otherwise broad recovery. Income gains were “relatively widespread across different types of families” when grouped by age, race, region, or work status. Cut the data by education and the pattern breaks. Families without a degree “either saw negligible growth or experienced declines.”

Three numbers capture the gap. College-educated mean income sits at $242,200. The median income for families without a high school diploma is $32,300. The ratio is roughly six to one. That spread widened over the three-year survey period despite a tight labor market, rising minimum wages, and service-sector wage compression.

What Drove the Divergence

Two mechanics inside the SCF data help explain the split. The first is asset ownership. College-educated households are more likely to own equities, retirement accounts, and homes, and the 2019 to 2022 window covered a sharp run-up in all three asset classes. Wealth gains feed back into income through capital gains, dividends, and interest, lifting the mean income for households that hold those assets.

The second is wage structure. Families without a high school diploma are concentrated in service-sector and hourly work, where nominal wage gains during the recovery were partially offset by reduced hours, lost overtime, and inflation in the categories they spend the most on. The Fed’s measure is a pre-tax measure of money income, so the 10% median decline reflects fewer dollars coming in before any adjustment for inflation.

Locating a Household in the Distribution

The SCF data allows households to be located on the credential ladder. A college-educated household earning near the $242,200 mean is sitting at the group average for that bracket. A household earning above the $42,200 mean is above the typical figure for that group, even if the dollar amount feels modest.

Three patterns emerge from the data. Household income compared against the mean and median for the matching education bracket gives a cleaner read than the national average, which blends groups that moved in opposite directions. Asset ownership tracks separately from wage income, since the SCF shows wealth and income gains moved together for degree holders and diverged for everyone else. Credential or training thresholds operate as a structural variable in long-run income, given how cleanly the 2022 SCF separates outcomes along that line.

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About the Author David Beren →

David Beren has been a Flywheel Publishing contributor since 2022. Writing for 24/7 Wall St. since 2023, David loves to write about topics of all shapes and sizes. As a technology expert, David focuses heavily on consumer electronics brands, automobiles, and general technology. He has previously written for LifeWire, formerly About.com. As a part-time freelance writer, David’s “day job” has been working on and leading social media for multiple Fortune 100 brands. David loves the flexibility of this field and its ability to reach customers exactly where they like to spend their time. Additionally, David previously published his own blog, TmoNews.com, which reached 3 million readers in its first year. In addition to freelance and social media work, David loves to spend time with his family and children and relive the glory days of video game consoles by playing any retro game console he can get his hands on.

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