As Gen Z regret âworthlessâ degrees, this CEO sent her kid to college in Londonâand sheâs saving over $50K
American parents (and students) weighing whether a U.S. college degree is still worth the hefty debt might want to hear what one philanthropy CEO did insteadâshe dodged six-figure tuition bills by sending her daughter to university in London.
It sounds counterintuitive. Flights, a foreign city, and a flat in one of the worldâs most expensive capitals. But for Greater Good Charities CEO, Liz Baker, saving roughly $50,000-a-year, has been well worth the added admin of sending her kid off to study abroad.
âOnce we started to look, we were like, âthis is so much cheaper,ââ she recalled to Fortune.
Tuition in London for her daughtersâ courses comes in at around $35,000 a year, versus the $80,000 to $90,000 out-of-state U.S. bill they were initially bracing for. âSo itâs like, really half the price,â Baker said.
As someone who has spent years running a nonprofitâscrutinizing budgets, tracking impact, and deciding where every dollar goes furthestâsheâs perhaps better placed than most to do the math. âI always tell people who have kids that are going to college, you should look at the UK,â Baker added.
Even paying for a flat in Central London is still cheaper than U.S. college costs
Her oldest daughter has now completed an undergraduate degree at Kingâs College London and is currently studying a masterâs at the London School of Economics, all while living in the heart of Englandâs capital city.
âEven paying for a flat in like Central London is cheaper than sending her to college here, because she was looking at UC Santa Barbara.â A staggering 747 km (or a 10-hour drive) from Arizona, where they were living at the time.
Essentially, wherever Bakerâs children went to university, theyâd have to factor in accommodation costs on top of tuition fees anywayâand even with London rent costing north of ÂŁ2,000 ($2,700) a month, it still worked out cheaper than the American alternative once accommodation costs were stacked on top of that six-figure tuition bill.
âI mean, itâs expensive. But again, tuition out of state at any college is more expensive,â Baker added.
She also shaved off an entire year of college costs. One of the quiet quirks of the British system is that most undergraduate degrees last three yearsâand if students arrive with enough Advanced Placement (AP) credits, (good grades equal more points) they can often skip an extra foundation year some international students need.
âMy one daughter did all of the AP classes, so she didnât have to do a foundation year,â Baker explained. âSo then you take into account that school is three years, and so then you eliminate that cost, and even masterâs are shorter.â
One year cut alone can shave tens of thousands of dollars off the total bill for international students, whose annual tuition typically ranges from about ÂŁ11,400 to ÂŁ38,000 (roughly $14,000 to $50,000), depending on the course and university.
A $1.7 trillion student debt crisis is making the UK look like the smarter option
Itâs not just the debt that worries Bakerâitâs what (if anything) students are getting in return. Many grads are now walking off U.S. campuses with eye-watering debt but no clear path into a well-paying job.
U.S. student debt has surpassed $1.7 trillion; meanwhile, the unemployment rate for fresh-faced grads just keeps rising.
Now, millions of graduates are questioning whether their degree was worth the price tag, and a growing chorus of the worldâs most powerful CEOs is starting to agree with them. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon has said he never hires for educational pedigree alone. Amazonâs Andy Jassy has said an âembarrassing amountâ of your success depends on attitude, not credentials. And with AI quietly replacing entry-level roles that generations of graduates relied on to justify their loans, the premium higher education once held is eroding fast.
Itâs why Baker thinks young people need to question the return on investment more than ever: âIf you leave with an English degree, and you have $200,000-plus in debt from student loansâwhy would you do that?â
She genuinely believes her kids are getting more bang for their buck in Britain.
Not only are UK degrees shorter, but theyâre also more specialised. Students typically focus on one subject and study it exclusively for the entire duration of their degreeâevery module, every year, laser-locked on their chosen field.
Crucially, in her eyes, theyâre better aligned with the skills employers actually want.
âI think the curriculum is better because itâs more focused,â Baker said, while adding that when she took her musical theater and criminal justice degree, she had to take irrelevant classes that sheâd never use in a career, like âEarth science.â
And when asked whether a British degree holds up against an American one in the eyes of employers, the CEO didnât hesitate: âYeah. 100%.â
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