When we talk about job displacement, AI gets all the headlines. But here's what might actually be hitting entry-level workers harder—the Fed's aggressive rate hikes. Higher interest rates cool down hiring across sectors, especially for junior positions that are often the first to go when companies tighten budgets. Meanwhile, AI is still rolling out gradually. The real squeeze on entry-level employment? That's coming from monetary policy tightening, not robots taking over just yet.
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CountdownToBroke
· 01-18 13:22
Oh wow, this is the real truth. It's much more effective than that AI hype.
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ContractBugHunter
· 01-18 00:22
Damn, someone finally said it. When Bitcoin was crashing, hiring was directly frozen. Who's thinking about AI then?
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OptionWhisperer
· 01-17 12:44
Interest rates are the real culprit, overshadowed by AI news.
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GhostInTheChain
· 01-16 12:59
Nah, really, everyone just blames AI, but they don't realize that interest rates are the real culprit.
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SadMoneyMeow
· 01-16 12:57
Wow, someone finally said it. Compared to AI, shrinking the balance sheet is truly the real way to bleed fresh graduates.
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CascadingDipBuyer
· 01-16 12:52
Federal rate hikes are the real culprit, but AI has stolen the spotlight.
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YieldWhisperer
· 01-16 12:43
lol everyone's doom-posting about robot overlords when the fed's literally just choking out hiring with rate hikes... actually the math doesn't check out on this "AI apocalypse" narrative, let's examine what's actually decimating entry-level jobs rn
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OnlyUpOnly
· 01-16 12:35
Hey, to put it simply, the Fed is cutting people, not AI. These two must be distinguished clearly.
When we talk about job displacement, AI gets all the headlines. But here's what might actually be hitting entry-level workers harder—the Fed's aggressive rate hikes. Higher interest rates cool down hiring across sectors, especially for junior positions that are often the first to go when companies tighten budgets. Meanwhile, AI is still rolling out gradually. The real squeeze on entry-level employment? That's coming from monetary policy tightening, not robots taking over just yet.