Young can’t find entry-level jobs. Here’s why

Young can’t find entry-level jobs. Here’s why

Young can’t find entry-level jobs. Here’s why

When Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell last week explained the central bank’s first rate cut of 2025, he zeroed in on one group: young people. “Kids coming out of college and younger people … are having a harder time finding jobs,” he said, pointing to a slowing labor market that has left many new grads struggling to land their first jobs, and acknowledging that the “job-finding rate is very, very low.”

Coming from the nation’s top economic policymaker, it was a stark acknowledgment of how elusive entry-level work has become.

Fresh research underscores the challenge new graduates face. Research firm Revelio Labs recently found that entry-level job listings are down 35% since 2023. Similarly, according to Cengage Group’s 2025 Employability Report , just 30% of this year’s graduating class have found full-time jobs related to their degree, while nearly half say they feel unprepared even to apply for entry-level positions.

The same report found that employers are pulling back on hiring new talent, with 75% reporting that they’ll fill the same number if or fewer entry-level roles compared with last year. At the same time, they’re demanding more credentials: 71% of employers now require a two- or four-year degree for entry-level work, up sharply from 55% just last year, even as fewer than 50% view a degree as a strong indicator of readiness.

Michael Hansen, CEO of Cengage Group , said this disconnect is leaving many graduates stranded. Unemployment for recent grads now sits at 5.8%, he noted, while employers complain they can’t find job-ready candidates. “The challenge isn’t just fewer jobs — it’s an education and employment disconnect,” Hansen said. “Employers need technical and digital skills, but colleges often emphasize only soft skills. Career readiness can’t be optional — it must be a shared responsibility.”

For Gregory J. Morris, CEO of the New York City Employment and Training Coalition , the problem is bigger than Gen Z. “Calling this pattern ‘hustle culture’ makes it sound like a trend,” he said. “In reality, today’s labor market no longer offers the launchpad it once did.” Young workers are patching together part-time jobs in retail, restaurants, or the gig economy just to make ends meet, he said, but in the process they’re losing out on crucial years of career growth, retirement savings, and professional development — falling behind previous generations, even as they’re forced to struggle harder.

“When early-career workers get stuck in churn, we all pay the price,” Morris said. “It depresses spending power and starves us of the skilled talent we’ll need five, ten years from now.” All of which means “this is a much larger warning sign for the health of our economy.”

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