The pie chart describes the distribution of Anthropology graduates regarding their destination choices whereas the table estimates their earnings after 5 years in the workforce.
Overall, Anthropology students’ trajectories diverged significantly, with full-time work being the most popular choice. In a 5-year long period, graduates working in the government sector earn the most, followed by freelance consultants and those working for private companies.
After graduation, most students decide to pursue a job. With 52% signing up for a full-time work, 15% had a part-time job and 5% followed higher studies alongside building a part-time work experience. Similarly, a slightly higher proportion of students (8%) decided to entirely focus on their studies. The remaining sectors are either unemployed (12%) or not known (8%).
5 years later, the government sector provided the majority of their Anthropology graduates (50%) with the highest rate of salaries available (over $100,000). Followed by the ones working as freelance consultants,with 40% of students making more than $100,000 yearly. In contrast, private companies offer most of them (35%) a salary range of $50,000 to $74,999. This sector also had the most amount of employees falling into the lowest salary range ($25,000-$49,999).
