Are billionaires more likely to be graduates? (2024)

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Are billionaires more likely to be graduates? (1)Image source, Thinkstock

By Sean Coughlan

Education correspondent

Are billionaires good with exams as well as their finances? Or are they more likely to have escaped school at the first opportunity and worked their way up to make their fortunes?

Are they likely to be graduates or to have dropped out from university, wanting to get a head-start in start-ups?

An analysis of the educational background of the top tier of dollar billionaires shows that they are much more likely than average to have gone to university. And they are more likely to have a postgraduate degree than no degree at all.

It doesn't give much support for the image of self-taught entrepreneurs, relying on their own wit and wisdom rather than higher education.

The number crunching, by insurance company GoCompare, has examined the post-school education of people appearing in the top 100 billionaire rich lists by Forbes magazine over the past 20 years.

The most popular subjects were courses related to economics and engineering. There were many more studying sciences than arts or humanities.

Image source, Getty Images

It means that about a quarter of these particularly wealthy billionaires did not enter university or dropped out before graduating.

Compared with the US adult population, it means that these billionaires are 68% more likely to have a bachelor's degree than the general population. And billionaires are more than three times as likely to have a postgraduate degree.

The billionaires are also 61% less likely not to have a degree than the typical US adult.

The type of institutions attended by the global mega rich are also much more likely to be elite institutions, rather than local colleges.

Harvard in the US is the single most likely name to be found on the CV of a billionaire, with Harvard Business School also popular.

Although one of the most famous names on the list, Bill Gates, dropped out of Harvard before finishing.

Reflecting the rise in Russian wealth, Moscow is among the most popular university cities for these billionaires, including Moscow State University and a range of Moscow specialist institutes.

Stanford University in California and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have become the launchpads for a rising number of tech billionaires. Google's Sergey Brin was a postgraduate at Stanford.

More stories from the BBC's Knowledge economy series looking at education from a global perspective and how to get in touch

Among UK universities, the London School of Economics and Cambridge have the most multi-billionaires in this list. Oxford can lay claim to Rupert Murdoch and in France, the Ecole Polytechnique has the most ex-student billionaires.

There are also billionaire graduates from Karlsruhe in Germany, Milan in Italy and Zurich in Switzerland.

Indian billionaires had attended the University of Mumbai and the steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal went to St Xavier's College, affiliated to the University of Calcutta.

The spread of universities does not provide much sense of a variety of backgrounds. In the US it's a scattering of Ivy League institutions and upmarket private colleges. There are billionaires from Princeton, Yale, Duke, Amherst and Bryn Mawr.

Image source, Thinkstock

There has been much soul-searching in many countries about the cost of higher education and whether the university system is entrenching division rather than promoting social mobility.

This study shows an alignment between the uber-rich and the most prestigious universities. And in terms of length of study, these tycoons are more likely to be D Phils than Del Boys.

This study does not show whether these billionaires began as poor, bright students who widened their opportunities through university. Or how many were the children of humble millionaires.

But it does show a decline in the self-made super-rich. The proportion of those who made their own money, rather than inherited it, slipped downwards in the financial crisis and has not recovered. It now stands at about 58%.

The analysis also shows the average age of these top 100 billionaires is about 61 years old. And compared with the general US adult population, they are much more likely to be married.

This analysis focuses on the very wealthiest - those at the top of the billionaire rich lists. But there have been previous university surveys for common or garden billionaires.

A survey of 2,300 billionaires from a Swiss banking group and a Singapore-based financial intelligence firm - the Wealth-X and UBS Billionaire Census - also found high levels of graduates.

But it found a different institution at the top of the table.

Image source, Thinkstock

The University of Pennsylvania had produced the most billionaires, followed by Harvard, Yale, the University of Southern California, Princeton, Cornell and Stanford.

But once again, among UK institutions, it was the London School of Economics that had produced the most billionaires.

And a study published this week by the Centre for Economic Performance at the LSE showed the link between degree grade and subsequent earning power in the UK.

It found that as more people went to university, greater financial return was gained by those with first class and upper second class degrees

Sir Peter Lampl, chairman of the Sutton Trust, which promotes social mobility and fair access to university, said: "It's no surprise that many of the world's richest people have postgraduate degrees from top universities.

"Our own research has identified a postgraduate wage premium of £200,000 in lifetime earnings.

"We do need to make sure that the financial rewards and opportunities post graduate degrees offer are available to bright people from all backgrounds not just the well-off."

Are billionaires more likely to be graduates? (2024)

FAQs

Are billionaires more likely to be graduates? ›

It means that about a quarter of these particularly wealthy billionaires did not enter university or dropped out before graduating. Compared with the US adult population, it means that these billionaires are 68% more likely to have a bachelor's degree than the general population.

What percentage of billionaires went to school? ›

Four of the 25 richest Americans attended the university, though Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg dropped out before graduating.In fact, one-fifth of billionaires on the list, including Michael Dell and Larry Ellison, dropped out of college before finishing their undergraduate degree.

How many billionaires never graduated college? ›

739 out of 2,473 billionaires do not have degrees. That makes the percentage 0.298 or rounded up to 30%. As I said to my son in his senior year of college (when he wanted to drop out with one semester left and used Bill Gates as an example) if you can guarantee me that you will be a billionaire quit.

What level of education do most billionaires have? ›

The net worths are accurate as of November 20, 2023. Key Findings: The most common college degrees among billionaires are business (22), economics (12) and engineering (11).

Are college dropouts more likely to become billionaires? ›

Indeed, according to a study by U.K. job site Adview, one in eight of the Forbes 400, which are the 400 wealthiest billionaires in the U.S., are college dropouts. They came to this conclusion by looking at the 362 billionaires with publicly available education information; 44 were dropouts.

Do 88% of millionaires have college degrees? ›

Research has found that 88% of millionaires graduated from college, and 52% have a master's or doctoral degree.

Where do the top 1% go to college? ›

At 38 colleges in America, including five in the Ivy League – Dartmouth, Princeton, Yale, Penn and Brown – more students came from the top 1 percent of the income scale than from the entire bottom 60 percent.

How many billionaires finished college? ›

The vast majority of billionaires however did make it to a bachelors degree, and many went farther. Twenty-two percent went on the nab a Master's degree, while 13.1% of all billionaires earned an MBA. About 9.5% took home a PhD, 3.4% can tout a JD, and a lesser 0.7% can hang an MD behind their desks.

What percentage of billionaires went to Harvard? ›

Here's the list of schools and the share of centi-millionaires that graduated from each: Harvard University - 7%

Does Jeff Bezos have a degree? ›

Before he became CEO of Amazon (and the world's richest person), Bezos graduated from Princeton University in 1986 with a degree in electrical engineering and computer science, after changing his major from physics.

Which billionaire didn t graduate? ›

Francois Pinault, founder of the luxury group Kering, dropped out of school when he was 11 years old to work in his father's lumber mill. According to Forbes, Pinault dropped out because his peers used to make fun of his "poor background." Today, he has a net worth of $33.2 billion, also per Forbes.

Who is the billionaire without a degree? ›

You don't have to get a college degree to become highly successful. That's according to Austin Russell, the world's youngest self-made billionaire, who dropped out of Stanford University in 2012 to start his company, Luminar Technologies, after receiving a $100,000 grant from the Peter Thiel Fellowship.

What degree did Elon Musk get? ›

In 1990, he entered Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. Two years later, he transferred to the University of Pennsylvania, an Ivy League university in Philadelphia, where he earned two degrees, a Bachelor of Arts in physics, and a Bachelor of Science degree in economics from the university's Wharton School.

Who is richer than Elon Musk? ›

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is officially wealthier than Elon Musk as Tesla's rapidly dropping stock tanks Musk's net worth.

What is the richest major? ›

Students who pursue a major specifically in science, technology, engineering and math — collectively known as STEM disciplines — are projected to earn the most overall, the Georgetown Center also found.

What percent of millionaires and billionaires went to college? ›

Almost two-thirds of millionaires (62%) graduated from public state schools, while only 8% went to a prestigious private school. But the bulk of millionaires did get that piece of paper. Eighty-eight percent of millionaires graduated from college, compared to 38% of the general population.

Are rich people more likely to get into college? ›

Children of the top one percent, earning more than $611,000 a year, are significantly overrepresented in the Ivy League — more likely to attend selective private colleges than students from any other income bracket with comparable SAT and ACT scores.

Are rich people more likely to go to college? ›

For applicants with the same SAT or ACT score, children from families in the top 1 percent were 34 percent more likely to be admitted than the average applicant, and those from the top 0.1 percent were more than twice as likely to get in.

Do most billionaires not go to college? ›

Most U.S. billionaires have a college degree, but these self-made superstars built their fortunes with just a high school diploma, if even that. J immy John Liautaud opened the first Jimmy John's sandwich shop in January 1983, just a few months after he graduated from high school.

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