Something strange is happening in the American job market, and it's not great news for anyone who spent four years and a small fortune getting a degree. College graduates now make up 25.3% of all unemployed Americans—a share that's doubled since the 2008 Financial Crisis. So much for that diploma being a guarantee of steady employment.
The White-Collar Slowdown Hits Hard
New data released Monday by The Kobeissi Letter paints a pretty grim picture of what analysts are calling a "white-collar slowdown." More than 1.9 million workers aged 25 and older with at least a bachelor's degree are currently out of work. That's not just a few unlucky folks between gigs—that's a structural shift in sectors that traditionally snapped up college grads.
Young workers are getting hammered even harder. The unemployment rate for Americans aged 20 to 24 has jumped to 9.2%, up 2.2 percentage points year-over-year. That's the highest level since May 2021, and the kind of volatility you usually only see during actual recessions. For context, that's not normal economic wobbling—that's a significant cooling in the entry-level job market.
Chamath Takes Aim at Student Loans
Venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya didn't hold back in his response to these numbers. His first takeaway? The federal government needs to "stop underwriting college loans immediately."
Palihapitiya's argument is straightforward: the current system funnels students into what he calls a "financial quagmire," where they pile up debt they'll never repay for degrees that "increasingly has little to no value." It's a harsh assessment, but one that's gaining traction as more degree-holders struggle to find work that justifies their educational investment.
Rethinking the College Premium
This white-collar slowdown challenges a belief that's been gospel in American economic thinking for decades—that higher education insulates you from unemployment. When the share of jobless degree-holders hits record levels, that assumption starts looking shaky.
The irony is hard to miss. September's jobs report showed the U.S. economy added 119,000 positions—more than double what forecasters expected. Yet economist Justin Wolfers warned that rising unemployment signals it's time to "cut back on the economic junk food." Meanwhile, Mark Zandi, Chief Economist at Moody's Analytics, says the country is stuck in a "serious affordability crisis," driven by fiscal policies around trade and immigration.
Markets React to Mixed Signals
After rebounding Monday on hopes of a December rate cut, market futures turned negative Tuesday. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 respectively, both slipped in premarket trading. SPY dropped 0.20% to $667.39, while QQQ declined 0.38% to $602.89.
The takeaway? The job market for college graduates isn't what it used to be, and the student debt burden that comes with those degrees is looking increasingly problematic. Whether Palihapitiya's call to end federal loan subsidies gains traction remains to be seen, but the data suggests the traditional higher education playbook might need some serious revision.