AI Isn’t Killing Entry-Level Jobs—Experienced Workers Are Taking Them
Ask any recent college graduate why they can’t land a job, and you’ll get the same standard answer: Artificial intelligence ate the entry-level market.
The narrative is clean and comforting. The chatbots took over the memos, the basic coding, and the ad copy that junior employees used to cut their teeth on. Those roles, we are told, are gone forever.
It’s a tidy explanation. It’s also wrong.
While the entry-level crunch is painfully real, the culprit isn't a fleet of robots. Instead, it’s a wave of older, highly experienced workers sliding down the corporate ladder and reclaiming jobs that used to belong to people half their age and a fraction of their price.
"It might not be that AI is taking new grad jobs, as much as workers with more experience taking new grad jobs." — Aaron Terrazas, former Chief Economist at Glassdoor
The Illusion of the AI Takeover
The data suggests that the anxiety surrounding an AI-driven job apocalypse remains largely speculative. Consider the macroeconomic reality:
A Uniform Market Shrink: According to data from Indeed’s Hiring Lab, job postings for junior roles did drop by 7% between August 2024 and August 2025. However, the entire job market contracted by that exact same 7%. Junior roles aren't being uniquely targeted; the whole pie is just getting smaller.
The Post-ChatGPT Reality: A study by Yale’s Budget Lab revealed that the overall mix of jobs in the economy has shifted no faster since the launch of ChatGPT than it did during the early internet boom. Furthermore, the share of the workforce in heavily AI-exposed occupations has held completely flat at 18%.
However, a working paper from Stanford’s Digital Economy Lab did find a troubling anomaly: in fields highly exposed to AI, employment for workers aged 22 to 25 dropped by 16%.
Crucially, the jobs themselves didn't disappear—employment in those sectors actually grew. The twist? Older, more experienced workers were the ones hired to fill them.
The Crunch in the Middle
The true bottleneck is happening in the middle tier of corporate America, forcing a domino effect down to the entry level.
[Senior Workers] ➔ Push Down ➔ [Mid-Tier Jobs] ➔ Overwhelm ➔ [Entry-Level Openings]
According to Hiring Lab data tracking U.S. tech postings between 2022 and 2025:
Senior Roles (5+ years exp.): Rose from 37% to 42% of all postings.
Mid-Tier Roles (2–4 years exp.): Plummeted from 46% to 40%.
Entry-Level Roles (0–1 year exp.): Held steady at 18%.
Because mid-level roles are evaporating, employers are raising the stakes. They are demanding more experience for mid-tier positions, which pushes senior workers further down the food chain.
For risk-averse companies nervous about headcount, hiring an overqualified worker is a no-brainer. Even if a veteran employee costs a bit more per hour, they require zero ramp-up time and carry virtually no hiring risk.
The High Cost of the "Experience Floor"
The financial data confirms that workers are compromising. The Atlanta Fed’s Wage Growth Tracker noted that the pay premium for job-switchers fell from 4.3% to 3.7%. When changing companies no longer yields a financial reward, workers naturally opt for lateral moves—or willingly accept lesser roles just to stay employed.
This shifts the entire baseline for entry-level listings. A job posting on Indeed might officially ask for "0–1 years of experience," but behind the scenes, the hiring manager's inbox is flooded with applicants carrying five years of corporate experience, robust networks, and flawless references. A 22-year-old graduate simply cannot compete.
The Long-Term Danger for Gen Z
This structural shift creates a dangerous trap for the youngest generation in the workforce:
Immediate Underemployment: Research from the Burning Glass Institute and Strada Institute shows that 52% of graduates are underemployed within a year of leaving college.
The Decade-Long Echo: If a graduate starts their career underemployed, they face a 73% chance of remaining underemployed a decade later.
The entry-level job has always been the foundation of a professional trajectory. AI hasn't destroyed that foundation—but older workers, squeezed out of the middle, have quietly occupied it.
