Does it pay to go to college? It depends. Your Mileage May Vary.
In high school I had excellent grades and test scores, my dysfunctional family figured I was "college material" so I should go. By the time I graduated high school in the early 1970s, I had $4,000 (ballpark $20K in today's dollars) saved up from working outside of school hours. (I started shoveling snow around town when I was ten, and had my first paper route when I was twelve.)
Because of my dysfunctional family's situation, I didn't qualify for any loans or grants, so I paid my own way. I was accepted by several excellent schools and rejected by only one but went to a middling university because they had a specific program of interest to me, and it was much more affordable than my other options.
I graduated with a liberal arts degree, intending to go to law school. I also had a minor in comp sci, thinking it would afford a rare and exotic niche for a lawyer. By the time I graduated, I had gone through all my savings and had taken out some student loans. I saw others graduate from law schools and not be able to make a living as a lawyer, while burdened with massive debt.
In a fit of risk aversion, I decided not to borrow up to my eyeballs to go to law school. I graduated at the bottom of a recession in a depressed regional economy and ended up with a minimum wage job. My comp sci training was all mainframe-based and quickly became obsolete with the ascent of the PC, and as I could not afford to keep my skills current - I didn't even own a PC until the 1990s - I violated the Digerati Prime Directive and became functionally obsolete.
I have a different minimum wage job today, but I still have student loan debt and I have no idea how (or if) I'm ever going to get out of the financial abyss. Where I work today, we have three college grads, all earning our state minimum wage.