CNNMoney.com has just posted an article on the top paying jobs for college graduates. Clearly engineers are in demand.
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Most lucrative college degrees
Nine out of 10 employers see higher competition for qualified graduates, according to a new survey. Why it pays to be a nerd.
By
Rob Kelley, CNNMoney.com staff writer
July 12 2007: 6:37 PM EDT
NEW
YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The salaries of new college graduates jumped
across the board this year as demand increased, according to a new
survey.
Nearly nine out of 10 employers reported that they're
seeing more competition for new college graduates than in past years,
according to a study by the National Association of Colleges and
Employers (NACE).
"This continues the positive trend reported in the Winter and Spring issues of Salary Survey," Marilyn Mackes, NACE executive director, said in a statement, referring to the association's quarterly report.
The results suggest that the increased hiring is translating directly into higher average starting salary offers.
The
students who made out the best were chemical engineering majors. They
earned an average 5.4 percent more than last year, bringing their
average to $59,361, according to the survey.
Computer engineering majors were offered $56,201, up 4.8 percent.
Mechanical
engineering grads offers' rose 4.6 percent to $54,128. Electrical
engineering grads' offers increased by 3.2 percent to $55,292. Civil
engineers earned $48,509, up 5.4 percent.
Computer science majors
saw salaries rise 4.1 percent to $53,396, while information sciences
grads received a 4.6 percent increase to $50,852. (Most expensive colleges.)
The
average offer for economics graduates (business/managerial) was
$48,483, while finance grads received a mean of $47,239. There is no
prior data for these majors because they were grouped together in
earlier studies.
Management of information systems majors posted
a 4.2 percent increase to $47,648. Marketing graduates averaged
$40,161, up 6.1 percent.
Accounting grads' average rose 2.3
percent to $46,718, while business administration and management
graduates saw their average rise 3.9 percent to $43,701.
Good news for liberal arts
Liberal
arts graduates also saw broad increases. Political science majors'
offers averaged 5.9 percent more at $34,590. English majors' averages
rose 5.3 percent to $32,553.
Psychology majors averaged $31,631, up 4.7 percent, while sociology majors earned 3.5 percent more at $32,033.
History majors were offered an average of $33,768, up 3.3 percent. 
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