Here's an uncomfortable truth about the AI revolution: it's not just replacing workers. It's quietly eroding the value of that college degree you spent four years and a small fortune to earn. A recent analysis by CNBC explores how artificial intelligence is reshaping the employment landscape for recent graduates, and the picture isn't particularly pretty.
"The rise of youth unemployment is worrisome," University of Chicago Assistant Economics Professor Anders Humlum explained. "For the individual worker, we can see that graduating in a recession leaves long-lasting scars for decades after."
When Everyone Has A Degree, Nobody Does
The math here is straightforward, if brutal. College has become dramatically more accessible to Gen Z compared to previous generations, which sounds like progress until you realize what it means: a rapidly expanding pool of degree-holding job seekers chasing roughly the same number of positions. Add AI to the mix, and you've got a recipe for credential inflation on steroids.
Gad Levanon, Chief Economist at Burning Glass Institute, isn't pulling punches about the oversupply problem. "We have a glut of people with a bachelor's degree, their wage growth is growing more slowly, and with AI continuing to automate more and more jobs, I expect that the trend will continue," he said.
The impact is hitting young professionals especially hard. AI has systematically targeted entry-level positions—traditionally the on-ramp for fresh graduates. Meanwhile, unemployment rates for older workers have remained relatively stable throughout the AI boom, according to the analysis.
"When you zoom in on the young workers, they seem to be struggling," Humlum noted.
The Great Pandemic Hiring Debate
Not everyone agrees that AI deserves all the blame for this employment crunch. Some argue we're still working through the hangover from COVID-era hiring sprees.
"The overhiring they did in the COVID era, when they didn't actually need to, the results of that are being seen now," Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas argued. "Correlation doesn't imply causation. It's not because of AI that people are losing jobs."
Levanon pushes back on this theory, believing that correction already happened in 2023. If he's right, blaming pandemic hiring patterns for today's unemployment numbers is just making excuses.
Still, there's a silver lining buried in the data. While AI has disrupted traditional entry-level roles, career network platform Handshake reports rising demand for professionals who actually know how to work with AI tools. The technology isn't just destroying jobs—it's creating new skill requirements.
"Employers are interested in early talent that is familiar and comfortable using AI," Handshake Chief Education Strategy Officer Christine Cruzvergara explained.
Why This Matters Beyond The Job Market
Youth unemployment isn't just a problem for young people trying to launch their careers. It ripples through the entire economy in ways that should concern everyone.
The immediate impact hits consumer spending. "If these workers have a hard time getting into jobs now, that impacts spending, them going out, and buying things," Indeed Hiring Lab Senior Economist Cory Stahle pointed out. Young professionals who can't find work don't buy houses, cars, or much of anything else.
But the long-term implications might be even more concerning. Rising unemployment among young professionals often serves as an early warning signal for broader economic slowdowns. Levanon also sees this trend fueling wealth inequality in dangerous ways.
"It's a big problem today, and it will become an even bigger problem in the future," he said.
The uncomfortable reality is that we're watching a fundamental shift in how education, technology, and employment intersect. College degrees may not be the golden ticket they once were, and AI isn't making things easier. For graduates entering this job market, adaptation isn't optional—it's survival.