I have a business degree and multiple welding certifications. Both are essential to what I do, but the welding pays insanely well due to my skill level. I love building my shop's capabilities and my metal skills, love working with my hands and I love adding capabilities and big accounts to my portfolio. I have a company car, killer bennies, deliverable-based production meaning we can work whenever we want, and fwiw I'll be starting a new subcontracting account this week where I'll be billing @$100/hr on top of my already good salary and the job will likely span 2-3 days a week for the next two years. Skilled trades pay crazy well if you're about your shit, and people really don't realize just how much experts get paid to provide solutions.
If I had it to do all over again, I would go to a less expensive school at the very least. It was important to learn the management side for when I'm inking new contracts, but the skills side is way more important when it comes to making money. I've met many managers with no degree that are awesome and also met many with degrees that suck balls. So basically just work on YOU. Figure out where your strengths and weaknesses are and work with that. Some will need college to maximize themselves, some should go to a trade school. It's all very individual though, and your path is yours alone!