Special Report

College Majors With Highest (and Lowest) Unemployment

Thinkstock

People who have graduated from college are historically more likely to be employed than those who have not. The unemployment rate for those with a four-year bachelor’s degree is 2.7% – lower than the national unemployment rate of 4.9% for all workers. In comparison, the rate for those with a regular high school diploma is 5.2%.

Even among college graduates, however, the unemployment rate varies greatly depending on major. While the unemployment rate for those who majored in certain subjects such as public policy and social psychology is higher than the national jobless rate, it is less than 0.1% for others such as nuclear technology and actuarial science.

24/7 Wall St. has determined the college majors that currently have the highest and lowest rates of unemployment using data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2015 American Community Survey.

Click here to see the majors with the highest unemployment.
Click here to see the majors with the lowest unemployment.
Click here to see the detailed findings and methodology.

The majors with the highest unemployment:

Thinkstock

15. Industrial and organizational psychology
> Unemployment: 5.5%
> Typical salary: $74,738
> Total labor force: 21,680
> Total unemployed: 1,191

[in-text-ad]

Thinkstock

14. Visual and performing arts
> Unemployment: 5.5%
> Typical salary: $49,279
> Total labor force: 72,497
> Total unemployed: 4,008

Wikimedia Commons

13. Cognitive science and biopsychology
> Unemployment: 5.6%
> Typical salary: $79,347
> Total labor force: 15,755
> Total unemployed: 890

Thinkstock

12. Miscellaneous psychology

> Unemployment: 5.7%
> Typical salary: $66,312
> Total labor force: 52,977
> Total unemployed: 3,004

[in-text-ad-2]

Thinkstock

11. Applied mathematics
> Unemployment: 5.7%
> Typical salary: $90,872
> Total labor force: 34,265
> Total unemployed: 1,968

Thinkstock

10. Communication technologies

> Unemployment: 5.9%
> Typical salary: $50,476
> Total labor force: 75,046
> Total unemployed: 4,458

[in-text-ad]

Thinkstock

9. Human services and community organization
> Unemployment: 6.0%
> Typical salary: $40,580
> Total labor force: 105,055
> Total unemployed: 6,279

Wikimedia Commons

8. Humanities
> Unemployment: 6.1%
> Typical salary: $60,497
> Total labor force: 51,542
> Total unemployed: 3,153

Thinkstock

7. Counseling psychology

> Unemployment: 6.2%
> Typical salary: $51,472
> Total labor force: 60,210
> Total unemployed: 3,747

[in-text-ad-2]

Thinkstock

6. Mining and mineral engineering
> Unemployment: 6.5%
> Typical salary: $117,732
> Total labor force: 12,224
> Total unemployed: 793

Thinkstock

5. Public policy

> Unemployment: 6.5%
> Typical salary: $97,299
> Total labor force: 31,494
> Total unemployed: 2,059

[in-text-ad]

Thinkstock

4. Film video and photographic arts
> Unemployment: 6.6%
> Typical salary: $55,147
> Total labor force: 164,953
> Total unemployed: 10,914

Thinkstock

3. Composition and rhetoric
> Unemployment: 6.9%
> Typical salary: $49,977
> Total labor force: 87,206
> Total unemployed: 6,012

Thinkstock

2. Social psychology

> Unemployment: 7.3%
> Typical salary: $54,430
> Total labor force: 10,808
> Total unemployed: 790

[in-text-ad-2]

Thinkstock

1. Miscellaneous fine arts
> Unemployment: 11.7%
> Typical salary: $43,721
> Total labor force: 11,430
> Total unemployed: 1,332

The majors with the lowest employment:

Thinkstock

15. Elementary education

> Unemployment: 1.9%
> Typical salary: $46,362
> Total labor force: 1,332,640
> Total unemployed: 25,431

[in-text-ad]

Thinkstock

14. Geosciences
> Unemployment: 1.8%
> Typical salary: $91,015
> Total labor force: 16,770
> Total unemployed: 301

Thinkstock

13. Agriculture production and management
> Unemployment: 1.8%
> Typical salary: $73,622
> Total labor force: 101,559
> Total unemployed: 1,813

Thinkstock

12. Animal sciences

> Unemployment: 1.7%
> Typical salary: $68,360
> Total labor force: 145,807
> Total unemployed: 2,542

[in-text-ad-2]

Thinkstock

11. Treatment therapy professions
> Unemployment: 1.7%
> Typical salary: $65,430
> Total labor force: 365,816
> Total unemployed: 6,373

Thinkstock

10. Teacher education: multiple levels

> Unemployment: 1.6%
> Typical salary: $45,330
> Total labor force: 102,776
> Total unemployed: 1,647

[in-text-ad]

Thinkstock

9. Engineering mechanics physics and science
> Unemployment: 1.6%
> Typical salary: $102,011
> Total labor force: 33,687
> Total unemployed: 526

Thinkstock

8. Genetics
> Unemployment: 1.2%
> Typical salary: $92,204
> Total labor force: 17,061
> Total unemployed: 204

Thinkstock

7. Court reporting

> Unemployment: 1.1%
> Typical salary: $61,333
> Total labor force: 6,095
> Total unemployed: 69

[in-text-ad-2]

Thinkstock

6. Educational psychology
> Unemployment: 1.1%
> Typical salary: $55,492
> Total labor force: 28,807
> Total unemployed: 321

Thinkstock

5. Educational administration and supervision

> Unemployment: 0.6%
> Typical salary: $65,631
> Total labor force: 44,211
> Total unemployed: 285

[in-text-ad]

Thinkstock

4. Miscellaneous agriculture
> Unemployment: 0.6%
> Typical salary: $59,866
> Total labor force: 11,935
> Total unemployed: 73

Thinkstock

3. Architectural engineering
> Unemployment: 0.4%
> Typical salary: $85,918
> Total labor force: 17,503
> Total unemployed: 73

Thinkstock

2. Nuclear, industrial radiology, and biological technologies

> Unemployment: <0.1%
> Typical salary: $59,717
> Total labor force: 16,399
> Total unemployed: 0

[in-text-ad-2]

Thinkstock

1. Actuarial science
> Unemployment: <0.1%
> Typical salary: $134,349
> Total labor force: 12,515
> Total unemployed: 0

Detailed Findings and Methodology

The average earnings among those with bachelor’s degrees in 13 of the 15 majors with the highest unemployment rates are greater than the average earnings across all jobs of $46,489 a year. However, they make approximately $7,000 less on average than the $64,381 average annual earnings for those with bachelor’s degrees.

When combined, the majors that have the lowest unemployment also have much larger labor forces. The total labor force in the 15 fields that have the lowest unemployment rates is comprised of 2.3 million workers, while there are just 807,142 workers with degrees in the 15 majors with the highest unemployment. This shows that more people may be drawn to those fields in which jobs are in higher demand.

To determine the college majors with the highest and lowest unemployment rates, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed data on employment status and undergraduate major from the Public Use Microdata Sample summary files of the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2015 American Community Survey. Data on earnings and educational attainment also came from the Census. Data on field of study and employment status are self-reported by the survey’s respondents. To be included in the dataset, the respondents must have graduated and received a bachelor’s degree. While respondents were able to list the field of study for any bachelor’s degree they have received and may have listed multiple majors, only the first major listed was considered in this analysis.

Get Ready To Retire (Sponsored)

Start by taking a quick retirement quiz from SmartAsset that will match you with up to 3 financial advisors that serve your area and beyond in 5 minutes, or less.

Each advisor has been vetted by SmartAsset and is held to a fiduciary standard to act in your best interests.

Here’s how it works:
1. Answer SmartAsset advisor match quiz
2. Review your pre-screened matches at your leisure. Check out the advisors’ profiles.
3. Speak with advisors at no cost to you. Have an introductory call on the phone or introduction in person and choose whom to work with in the future

Get started right here.

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.