Here's something worth thinking about: AI is projected to push productivity gains somewhere between 0.8% to 1.5% each year. Sounds good on paper, right? But here's the catch—the impact on entry and mid-level workers is brutal. This squeeze explains a lot about why fresh college graduates are finding it so tough to land jobs these days. The productivity boost isn't equally distributed. While companies benefit from automation efficiencies, those at the bottom of the career ladder face real headwinds. Job search data backs this up. The market's restructuring faster than new talent can adapt, creating a mismatch between what employers need and what early-career workers can offer. For anyone watching economic cycles, this is worth monitoring—employment pressure often signals broader economic stress ripples across sectors.
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FlippedSignal
· 3h ago
It's heartbreaking. Frontline employees working 996 are still being replaced by AI, and capital is winning big.
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governance_lurker
· 01-17 08:26
It's all capitalist nonsense; increased production efficiency ultimately only benefits the bosses. Fresh graduates getting screwed over is just how it is.
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DefiPlaybook
· 01-16 21:37
According to data, an annual productivity growth of 0.8%-1.5% seems positive, but it actually masks the risk of structural unemployment—especially the systematic suppression of recent graduates. It is worth noting that this uneven distribution of benefits also has a reflection in the on-chain ecosystem, where small and medium-sized capital faces similar entry and exit cost pressures. Risk warning: when employment pressure continues to rise, it usually signals a precursor to a broader economic downturn.
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LayerZeroJunkie
· 01-16 21:36
This wave of AI dividends is indeed a win for capital, with the underlying workers being crushed to death.
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AirdropAnxiety
· 01-16 21:34
Basically, capitalists are making a fortune, and us recent graduates are being sold and still smiling while counting money... AI really has nothing worth bragging about.
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MetaReckt
· 01-16 21:21
It's all about cutting costs for companies, while we graduates have to go hungry.
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hodl_therapist
· 01-16 21:16
AI is really a double-edged sword. The boss is making a killing with doubled efficiency, but what about us little guys? Competing to the sky and still have no work to do—damn it.
Here's something worth thinking about: AI is projected to push productivity gains somewhere between 0.8% to 1.5% each year. Sounds good on paper, right? But here's the catch—the impact on entry and mid-level workers is brutal. This squeeze explains a lot about why fresh college graduates are finding it so tough to land jobs these days. The productivity boost isn't equally distributed. While companies benefit from automation efficiencies, those at the bottom of the career ladder face real headwinds. Job search data backs this up. The market's restructuring faster than new talent can adapt, creating a mismatch between what employers need and what early-career workers can offer. For anyone watching economic cycles, this is worth monitoring—employment pressure often signals broader economic stress ripples across sectors.