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If you lose your job to AI, it’s even harder to bounce back

The latest research from Goldman Sachs indicates that workers who are hit hard by AI will take longer to find a new job—and could face real financial consequences for up to a decade. The Hidden Cost of AI Displacement: Why Losing a Job to Automation Hurts More Than You Think

While debate continues over which roles AI will eliminate versus augment, new research from Goldman Sachs highlights a sobering reality: workers displaced by technological shifts face significantly steeper hurdles in rebuilding their careers—and their lives.

 The Recovery Gap Is Real

Analyzing four decades of federal data tracking more than 20,000 Americans from the 1950s through the 1980s, the report reveals that workers most affected by technological disruption took, on average, one month longer to secure new employment compared to peers in less-affected sectors. When displacement coincided with a recession, the unemployment spell extended by an additional three weeks, and the risk of future job loss increased markedly.

"These patterns suggest that AI-driven displacement could impose lasting costs on affected workers, worsening labor market outcomes for several years," write economists Pierfrancesco Mei and Jessica Rindels, the report's authors.
Beyond Unemployment: The Long-Term Scar

The consequences extend far beyond the job search itself. Workers displaced by technological change experienced:

*   **Reduced earning power**: Even after re-employment, they faced a persistent earnings penalty of more than 3%.
*   **Stunted income growth**: Over the following decade, their earnings grew 10 percentage points slower than continuously employed peers—and 5 points slower than workers displaced for non-technological reasons.
*   **Delayed life milestones**: Financial instability translated into postponed homeownership and slower household formation, particularly for those displaced early in their careers.

"The scarring effects also spill over into broader economic outcomes," the authors note, emphasizing how technological unemployment can ripple through personal finance, family planning, and wealth building.

 Who's Most at Risk?

While media narratives often spotlight AI's threat to recent graduates and entry-level roles, the Goldman analysis underscores particular vulnerability among workers aged 25 to 35—a demographic navigating critical financial and personal milestones. Job loss during this window can derail progress toward buying a home, starting a family, or building savings.

That said, younger workers may also hold an advantage: their relative adaptability and shorter career histories could position them to pivot into emerging roles created by AI adoption. Economists stress that while automation displaces certain tasks, it also generates new opportunities—though these pathways remain difficult to predict in real time.

 The Bigger Picture: Caution Amid the Hype

Despite bold claims from tech leaders and AI-attributed layoffs making headlines, most economists caution that widespread labor market disruption from AI is not yet evident in the data. One recent Goldman Sachs estimate tied AI to roughly 16,000 net monthly job losses over the past year—but notably excluded potential job creation from AI infrastructure investments, such as new data centers.

The takeaway isn't inevitability, but preparedness. As AI integration accelerates, supporting displaced workers through retraining, portable benefits, and targeted economic policies may be critical to ensuring that technological progress doesn't come at the expense of long-term worker well-being.

In an era of rapid change, the goal shouldn't just be to adopt AI—but to build a labor market resilient enough to help people thrive alongside it.