Short answer: it depends.
Long answer:
If you study something useful, like virtual machines or compiler theory, then you will get a "good job" doing interesting (read: hard) work. The google guys, the microsoft guys are all doing cutting edge stuff, compiler optimizations, image processing, etc.
If you study something not so useful, like <insert esoteric area of study here > then you will have problems getting work right out of school.
Personally, I was a CS guy with an MS and no experience who started out making 15K less than a guy with "20 years experience" who couldn't program anything other than VB.net. Yeah it sucked and my ego was stomped and crushed, but Within a year he was fired and after my pay bump and performance bonuses I made more than him despite him having "20 years of experience" and my "zero experience".
Yeah it will suck initially when you get out (it did for me), but if you hustle and bust your butt then you will hit the sweet spot within a year or two.
I really recommend doing it right out of school simply because you won't know how much better life is in the real world and won't dwell on how painful grad work is. Almost all the people I know who went back to school for an MS in CS didn't finish it because they couldn't stand drop in quality of life when they go back to school, whereas I finished just because I never knew what life was like in the real world and to go from < 15k/yr to making ~100K/yr is much, much better than the other way around.