A growing number of young graduates are struggling to find work not because of artificial intelligence, but because employers are becoming more reluctant to hire inexperienced workers into remote jobs, according to a new study from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
The research points to a hiring shift that has largely happened beneath the surface of the labor market. As remote and hybrid work became a permanent feature of many industries after the pandemic, companies increasingly favored experienced candidates who could operate independently with less supervision. For graduates trying to secure their first professional role, that change appears to be carrying real consequences.
The study, released by New York Fed economists Natalia Emanuel, Emma Harrington and Amanda Pallais, estimates that remote work can explain roughly 64% of the increase in unemployment among young college graduates since the pandemic. While unemployment among workers under 29 has risen noticeably in recent years, joblessness among more experienced college graduates has remained comparatively stable.
That conclusion challenges one of the most common assumptions surrounding the current labor market. Much of the discussion around graduate employment has focused on generative AI and automation. Yet the researchers found that employment challenges for younger workers began before tools such as ChatGPT entered the mainstream and remained visible even after accounting for occupations with higher exposure to artificial intelligence.
Instead, the report points toward a more practical issue: training.
For decades, employers accepted that hiring younger workers required investment. New recruits needed guidance, mentoring and time to develop workplace skills. In traditional office environments, much of that happened naturally. Junior employees learned by sitting near experienced colleagues, observing how problems were solved and receiving constant feedback.
Remote work changes that equation.
The researchers found that rising unemployment among young graduates was concentrated in occupations that can be performed remotely. Software engineering and other knowledge-based professions showed a widening employment gap between younger and older workers. In jobs requiring a physical presence, the same pattern was far less pronounced.
That matters because many of the careers graduates aspire to enter today fall into exactly those remote-friendly categories.
Inside large organizations, hiring patterns appear to be moving in the same direction. The researchers examined data from a Fortune 500 technology company and found that when offices closed during the pandemic, the business hired fewer inexperienced workers and increased recruitment of more experienced candidates. When offices reopened, hiring of younger workers increased again.
One detail stood out.
Even after offices reopened, teams that continued operating remotely remained more likely to recruit experienced employees than junior workers.
That finding helps explain why some graduates feel they are entering a labor market that appears healthy on the surface but remains difficult to break into. Employers continue hiring, but many seem increasingly focused on candidates who require less support and can contribute immediately.
The report also offers a different perspective on the growing debate around artificial intelligence and entry-level work. While many executives have openly discussed how AI could reshape hiring in the future, the researchers found little evidence that AI is responsible for the rise in youth unemployment seen so far.
That does not mean artificial intelligence will not play a larger role in future workforce decisions. Businesses continue investing heavily in automation, productivity software and digital tools. But the evidence examined by the researchers indicates that remote work has already altered hiring behavior in measurable ways.
For graduates, the challenge is straightforward. Many of the industries that once offered the clearest route into professional careers are also the industries most comfortable with distributed work. Entry-level opportunities still exist, but competition for them has become noticeably tougher.
The consequences could extend beyond today’s job market. Economists have long found that workers who begin their careers during weaker hiring periods often earn less and advance more slowly than peers who enter stronger labor markets. Early career opportunities can influence earnings, promotions and professional development for years.
Many employers remain committed to flexible working arrangements. Others continue pushing return-to-office policies, often arguing that younger employees benefit from greater collaboration and mentorship. The New York Fed study adds fresh evidence to that debate by suggesting that workplace structure may influence not only how employees develop, but also whether they get hired in the first place.
Companies are under constant pressure to improve productivity and manage costs. Experienced hires often offer a quicker path to results and require less day-to-day supervision. For graduates seeking their first opportunity, that preference creates a difficult cycle. Employers want experience, but gaining experience requires someone willing to provide it.
Companies appear willing to teach junior employees when managers sit a few desks away. When teams are spread across cities, states and countries, many seem increasingly inclined to hire someone who already knows the job.


