This is especially true in the US if you have a marketable scientific skill. There are millions looking for jobs in the US, but at the same time there are a quarter million jobs in science and engineering fields that are simply left empty because there aren't qualified educated people to fill them. A big part of the unemployment problem in the US is really an education problem. The US lags far behind in math and science education and more and more jobs require some kind of skills in math and or science to do. Even a great deal of manufacturing jobs these days require math skills and computer literacy. But compared to countries over seas like china and india, the US has become lazy and dumb in these areas. There are only so many service industry jobs to fill that don't require modern education, but the US has a glut of people who are only qualified to fill these rolls.
A few stats on income.
Median income for a chemist with a B.S. 46k a year
For a software engineer with a B.S 56k a year
Electrical Engineer with a B.S 60k a year
For a full time retail worker 20k year
For a factory worker 32k a year
And the people looking for jobs in those last two catagories are the one's who are unemployed. And for the first three, those are STARTING salaries for people with 0-2 years of experience. It only gets higher with seniority. Go get a college education.
According to a recent article I read (I can try to find it if anyone wants the exact reference), the average student loan debt a student leaves college with was around 25k, the price of a nice new car. It's stupid not to go to college.