Artificial
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For years, only a small portion of the people experiencing long spells of joblessness were college graduates. That’s starting to change.
By Noam Scheiber
For years, only a small portion of the people experiencing long spells of joblessness were college graduates. That’s starting to change.
Artificial
Intelligence
Supported by
For years, only a small portion of the people experiencing long spells of joblessness were college graduates. That’s starting to change.
By Noam Scheiber

As the AI boom redefines work, new grads face a shrinking share entry-level jobs. For colleges, this brings added attention to…

If you count people with a college degree, some college, or an associate’s degree, they make up almost 42% of unemployed people.

AI could create a generation further burdened with student loan debt—and no job to repay it, according to Sen. Mark Warner.

The U.S. added 178,000 jobs in March — a gain only partially explained by striking health care employees' return to work. Are…

AI's impact on jobs for college graduates will grow into a huge unemployment crisis in the next five years if we don't act now,…

"The young people I'm seeing get hired despite the challenging environment are the ones relying on the oldest of old-school…