Here's an uncomfortable truth: the old American promise that you could work hard and build a decent life is getting squeezed from multiple directions. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon laid this out plainly in a recent CNN interview, explaining how artificial intelligence and economic shifts are rewriting the rules for young workers trying to get their start.
"When you graduate, whether it's high school, community college or college, you need the skills to get the job," Dimon said. "It's not enough anymore to say, 'I can work hard.' In the old days, you could be in 10th grade, go get a factory [job] in Detroit, and eventually you could afford a family, a home, a car and that may not be true anymore."
It's a stark shift from how previous generations built their lives, and the numbers back up his concerns.
The Numbers Tell A Tough Story
Take housing, which is probably the clearest signal something fundamental has changed. The National Association of Realtors' Housing Affordability Index dropped to 97.4 in the second quarter. That means typical families no longer earn enough to qualify for a mortgage on a median-priced home. When that index sits below 100, the math simply doesn't work for average earners.
Housing isn't the only squeeze. Education and childcare costs have exploded too. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, tuition, school fees, and childcare costs across average U.S. cities climbed from an index level of 100 in 1983 to 897 by September. That's nearly nine times higher in four decades.
Against this backdrop, Dimon argues that technical skills have become more valuable than raw work ethic. He specifically mentioned AI and coding as areas "we know we need the skills," noting that industry training courses offer faster, more accessible routes into stable employment than traditional paths.
The AI Anxiety Is Real
Gen Z workers aren't oblivious to what's happening. Research from Deutsche Bank published in September found that 24% of workers ages 18 to 34 are "very worried" that AI will replace their job within the next two years. Only 10% of workers 55 and older share that level of concern.
That generational gap makes sense when you consider who's entering the workforce during this transformation versus who's already established in their careers.
Where The Opportunities Actually Are
So what does the future job market actually look like? Government projections offer some concrete answers that align with Dimon's emphasis on specialized skills.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics expects wind turbine service technician jobs to grow about 50% from 2024 to 2034, with median annual pay around $62,580. The entry requirement is typically a postsecondary certificate, not a four-year degree.
Solar photovoltaic installer positions are projected to increase roughly 42% over the same timeframe, with median pay near $51,860. Most workers enter with a high school diploma and on-the-job training.
These aren't glamorous tech startup roles, but they're exactly the kind of skilled positions Dimon is talking about. They pay reasonably well, require specific training rather than general credentials, and exist in sectors where automation can't easily replace human expertise.
Dimon emphasized that emerging markets tied to infrastructure, energy and advanced computing need hands-on expertise that technology can't simply replicate. Companies expanding AI operations, including data centers and advanced processing facilities, depend on skilled workers across multiple trades to meet rising demand.
The message for Gen Z is pretty clear: determination matters, but it's not enough on its own anymore. The game has changed, and winning requires building specific, marketable skills that align with where the economy is actually heading.