WorldChinaJapanIndiaSouth KoreaIndonesiaTaiwanThailandU.S.East AsiaChinaHong KongMacaoTaiwanMongoliaJapanSouth KoreaNorth KoreaSoutheast AsiaIndonesiaThailandMalaysiaSingaporePhilippinesVietnamMyanmarCambodiaLaosBruneiEast TimorSouth AsiaIndiaPakistanAfghanistanBangladeshSri LankaNepalBhutanMaldivesCentral AsiaKazakhstanUzbekistanTurkmenistanTajikistanKyrgyzstanOceaniaAustraliaNew ZealandPapua New GuineaPacific IslandsRest of the WorldMiddle EastRussia & CaucasusNorth AmericaLatin AmericaEuropeAfricaTrendingIran tensionsInflationTrump administrationArtificial intelligenceElectric vehiclesSupply ChainTaiwan tensionsBank of JapanImmigrationESGExplainerBusinessBusinessSemiconductorsAutomobilesEnergyTransportationRetailTravel & LeisureMedia & EntertainmentFood & BeverageFinanceElectronicsStartupsBusiness dealsMarketsMarketsEquitiesCurrenciesBondsCommoditiesPropertyIPOWealth ManagementTechTech#techAsiaChina techStartupsCryptocurrenciesDealStreetAsiaPoliticsPoliticsChinaJapanIndiaSouth KoreaIndonesiaTaiwanThailandU.S.East AsiaChinaHong KongMacaoTaiwanMongoliaJapanSouth KoreaNorth KoreaSoutheast AsiaIndonesiaThailandMalaysiaSingaporePhilippinesVietnamMyanmarCambodiaLaosBruneiEast TimorSouth AsiaIndiaPakistanAfghanistanBangladeshSri LankaNepalBhutanMaldivesCentral AsiaKazakhstanUzbekistanTurkmenistanTajikistanKyrgyzstanOceaniaAustraliaNew ZealandPapua New GuineaPacific IslandsRest of the WorldMiddle EastRussia & CaucasusNorth AmericaLatin AmericaEuropeAfricaEconomyEconomyChinaJapanIndiaSouth KoreaIndonesiaTaiwanThailandU.S.East AsiaChinaHong KongMacaoTaiwanMongoliaJapanSouth KoreaNorth KoreaSoutheast AsiaIndonesiaThailandMalaysiaSingaporePhilippinesVietnamMyanmarCambodiaLaosBruneiEast TimorSouth AsiaIndiaPakistanAfghanistanBangladeshSri LankaNepalBhutanMaldivesCentral AsiaKazakhstanUzbekistanTurkmenistanTajikistanKyrgyzstanOceaniaAustraliaNew ZealandPapua New GuineaPacific IslandsRest of the WorldMiddle EastRussia & CaucasusNorth AmericaLatin AmericaEuropeAfricaFeaturesTrading AsiaASEAN MoneyTech AsiaBusiness AsiaChina Up ClosePolicy AsiaBig in AsiaDatawatchInfographicsOpinionOpinionEditor-in-Chief's PicksThe Nikkei ViewLife & ArtsLife & ArtsLifeArtsMy Personal HistoryTea LeavesEat & DrinkDestinationsBooksObituariesWatch & ListenPodcastsVideoPhotosArtificial intelligence has altered the job prospects of even graduates from top-tier American universities. (Photo by Hiroki Endo)MIZUKI UCHIYAMA and SORA SATOJune 30, 2026 03:27 JSTNEW YORK -- U.S. university graduates are blaming AI as they struggle to find careers after paying up to hundreds of thousands of dollars to attend prestigious schools.Read NextLatest on Artificial intelligenceSponsored ContentAbout Sponsored ContentThis content was commissioned by Nikkei's Global Business Bureau.
'I've applied to 8,000 jobs': Tech grads at top US schools feel shut out by AI
Artificial intelligence takes entry-level work while uncertainty keeps hiring low
Graduates from elite US universities face severe hiring barriers; one candidate submitted 8,000 applications. AI is restructuring tech hiring: junior roles disappear while specialized AI skills become essential, forcing companies to rethink talent acquisition.








