When a Diploma Used to Be Enough
A generation ago, a high school diploma opened doors to stable, middle‑class jobs.
A bachelor’s degree was a bonus — not a requirement.
Education expanded opportunity.
Then employers realized they could demand more without paying more.
The Rise of the Bachelor’s-as-Baseline
Jobs that once required:
- a high school diploma
now require: - a bachelor’s degree
But the job duties?
The pay?
The career ladder?
Almost identical.
Employers shifted risk and cost onto students.
Students pay thousands for credentials that don’t increase wages.
The Master’s Inflation
Next came the MA/MS requirement.
Positions that once accepted a BA now demand:
- a master’s degree
- unpaid internships
- practicum hours
- specialized certifications
All for jobs that still pay entry-level wages.
More degrees → more tuition → more debt → same job.
The PhD Creep
Some fields now expect:
- doctoral degrees
- postdoctoral work
- years of underpaid research
- publications
- conference travel (self-funded)
Yet the job market hasn’t expanded.
The credential bar rises while opportunities shrink.
Why Employers Do This
Degree creep benefits employers because:
- It filters applicants without raising wages
- It shifts training costs onto students
- It creates a surplus of overqualified workers
- It normalizes unpaid or underpaid labor
- It reinforces class and wealth divides
It’s not about skill.
It’s about gatekeeping.
The Wealth Barrier
Degree creep disproportionately excludes:
- poor students
- rural students
- disabled students
- minority students
- first-generation students
Each additional degree requires:
- more tuition
- more fees
- more unpaid labor
- more time without income
- more debt
The people with the least resources face the highest barriers.
The Credential Trap
Students are told:
“Just get one more degree — then you’ll be competitive.”
But the finish line keeps moving:
- BA → MA
- MA → PhD
- PhD → postdoc
- postdoc → fellowship
- fellowship → “experience preferred”
The system manufactures scarcity.
The Result
Degree creep:
- inflates requirements
- depresses wages
- expands debt
- delays adulthood
- reinforces inequality
- traps students in perpetual credentialing
The job didn’t change.
The price of admission did.
Degree creep isn’t about education.
It’s about extraction — and the people who can’t pay are left outside the gate.
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