I wouldn't have made it without college. First, everywhere I applied required a degree. I left high school at 17 and I basically had zero maturity and the structure was helpful in my development. Of course it's absolutely a hot mess how state legislatures have wrecked public universities and the current generation has to not only find $150K for an education, but starter homes are running $500K+
I don't know how we dig out of that.
But we still need surgeons, attorneys, accountants, engineers, geologists, etc because we can't compete on a global scale with a nation of influencers, plumbers and baristas. We're not living in an economic vacuum and will never again no matter how hard we tariff, navel-gaze and engage in wishful thinking.
I don't pretend to know what the answer is.
Arizona State is $31K/year in 2024 where, I think I remember when I applied for the 1988-1989 academic year it was about $4k/year.
Hell, a semester at Riddle when I went was $1800 when I first started.