The AI Paradox: Why the Corporate World is Thriving, but Gen Z is Stranded
Smart people are walking back their predictions of an outright AI job apocalypse. Even the prophets of white-collar doom—like Anthropic’s Dario Amodei and OpenAI’s Sam Altman—have softened their stances.
The most compelling explanation for why AI won’t kill off the labor market comes, unexpectedly, from a 190-year-old Dutch software company called Wolters Kluwer. But embedded in their reassuring data is a quiet, brutal truth: it explains exactly why Gen Z cannot find a job.
The Illusion of the "Job Apocalypse"
To understand why the broader economy isn't crashing, we have to look at two foundational economic concepts cited by Wolters Kluwer:
1. The "Lump of Labor" Fallacy
Coined in 1891, this is the mistaken belief that there is a fixed amount of work to be done in an economy. Doom-mongers assume that if AI automates a task, a human worker is permanently displaced. In reality, freeing up workers from rote tasks allows them to shift toward higher-value strategy and judgment.
2. The Jevons Paradox
Dating back to 1865, this paradox shows that when a resource becomes cheaper and more efficient, our consumption of it increases, rather than decreases. When steam engines became fuel-efficient, coal consumption skyrocketed because engines suddenly proliferated everywhere.
Applied to the modern office, AI-driven efficiency doesn't reduce the demand for human work; it expands the universe of what clients expect. Efficiency creates an appetite for more data, more research, and more output.
The Reality Check: AI is a task machine, not a job machine. Wolters Kluwer’s internal research reveals that AI can successfully execute individual tasks 50% to 60% of the time. However, when asked to handle a project end-to-end, its success rate plummets to just 2%.
AI still lacks the holistic judgment required to complete a full job. Humans are still vital—but only certain kinds of humans.
The "Seniorization" Trap: Erasing the First Rung
While legal and corporate teams are actually growing, they are decoupling their growth from entry-level hiring. The corporate ladder is structurally disappearing, creating a devastating landscape for young professionals:
The Hiring Drought: The entry-level job market is at a 37-year low. Professional services entry roles have plunged 29% since early 2024.
The Vanishing On-Ramp: Finance and tech—the traditional launchpads for recent graduates—have shed an average of 9,000 jobs per month since 2023 (compared to adding 44,000 a month pre-pandemic).
The AI Exposure: Young workers (ages 22 to 25) in AI-exposed roles have faced a 13% drop in employment since 2022.
Firms don't need fewer workers; they need more senior workers who are heavily leveraged by AI to produce massive amounts of sophisticated work.
PwC labels this phenomenon "seniorization." According to their 2026 AI Global Jobs Barometer, entry-level job postings in AI-exposed fields are now seven times more likely to demand advanced skills historically reserved for later career stages—such as strategic decision-making, stakeholder management, and high-level leadership.
History Rhymes: Who Captures the Wealth?
Gen Z is not struggling because of a bad attitude or lack of ambition. They are struggling because the corporate world has stopped training its own replacements. By treating AI as a shortcut to bypass foundational training, industries are failing to fund the next generation of experts.
This is the oldest pattern in economic history:
The medieval plow skyrocketed agricultural yields, but the surplus went to build cathedrals, not enrich peasants.
The spinning jenny automated textile production but resulted in longer hours and lower wages for factory workers.
The internet created unprecedented wealth but concentrated it within a handful of tech platforms, leaving the masses with gig work and content moderation queues.
The existential question surrounding AI has never been whether the technology can create wealth or maintain economic growth. The question is—and has always been—who captures that wealth, and will the next generation be allowed a seat at the table to share in it?
