As members of the ATE community know, apprenticeships work. A number of recent reports have focused on the economic advantage that such programs provide. Notably, after completion, 87% of apprentices in the United States find jobs and the average starting salary of apprentice completers reaches upward of $50,000 a year. After six years, earnings of the average apprenticeship participant are 1.4 times greater than the earnings of non-participants.
In addition, apprenticeship programs in the United States don’t only help those who participate in them; they help the larger community as well. A recent Washington State study found that, for every $1 the state government spent to help a community college student enter and finish an apprenticeship program, tax payers received a whopping $23 on the investment.