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Message
Companies Predict 2026 Will Be the Worst College Grad Job Market in Five Years
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:41 am
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:41 am
quote:
Employers have a warning for the Class of 2026: Next spring’s graduate-hiring market is likely to be even worse than this year’s.
Six months out from graduation season, more than half of 183 employers surveyed by the National Association of Colleges and Employers rate the job market for the Class of 2026 as poor or fair. That is the most pessimistic outlook since the first year of the pandemic, according to the survey, which is widely seen as an early signal of graduate hiring each year.
A cooling job market is darkening that outlook. In recent months, employers from Amazon.com to United Parcel Service have revealed plans to cut thousands of jobs. The latest is Verizon Communications, which, according to people familiar with the matter, plans to cut 15,000 jobs over the next week in its largest reduction ever.
Companies say the uncertain economic outlook has pushed them to hire more conservatively, and many are giving priority to recruits with some experience as opposed to fresh-from-college graduates. More executives are also speaking openly about the potential of artificial intelligence to bring deep job cuts and take over more tasks that new graduates are traditionally tapped to do.
For college seniors, that means they are also competing against junior workers who have been recently laid off. The unemployment rate for recent college graduates was 4.8% in June, greater than overall unemployment that month and the highest June level for recent graduates in four years, according to a Federal Reserve Bank of New York analysis.
Overall, employers say they expect a 1.6% increase in hiring for the Class of 2026, down considerably from their plans for the Class of 2025 last fall, according to the semiannual survey. College recruiting for full-time jobs typically kicks off in the fall or earlier, and by the spring, employers have a clearer sense of where hiring will land. In recent years, employers have revised their spring plans downward from the fall survey.
LINK
Seeing this personally in oil & gas and petrochem industries. Even in the Engineering field, where those grads typically have the least amount of worries in getting work in that sector.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:52 am to ragincajun03
Don't worry class of 2026, 50-year mortgages and 15-year auto loans are on the way.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:53 am to Baers Foot
"You will own nothing and you will be happy."
-Klaus Schwab
-Klaus Schwab
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:54 am to ragincajun03
It’s over
We had a good run
We had a good run
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:54 am to ragincajun03
Louisiana just needs to open up votech schools and feed Texas their labor. Slidell could turn that old mall into a votech school and have it be productive
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:58 am to ragincajun03
GL to all the baw that spent thousands of hours learning to code.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:59 am to jmarto1
quote:
Louisiana just needs to open up votech schools and feed Texas their labor.
Interesting thing is, in Texas, votech schools and community colleges are encouraged. So they're developing a good bit of their own supply.
A few decades ago in Louisiana, the prevailing thought amongst politicians and community "leaders" was that you were insulting a high school kid if you suggested they look into one of those types of education paths after high school. If you suggested anything other than a four year university, you were calling them stupid.
So now...here we are.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:02 am to ragincajun03
I think I have read where they estimate we have less than 50% of the blue collar labor we need. Let's face it, Louisiana is a satellite of Texas and the worthwhile labor tends to leave for Texas. Let's embrace that and create an industry of training people here
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:03 am to jmarto1
Texas has a pretty substantial shortage of electricians with all the data center work right now
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:09 am to ragincajun03
As rough as education can be sometimes this is one thing that makes me glad I picked this field. My job is pretty dang secure and it's pretty easy to find jobs at other locations if I don’t like where I am for some reason.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:14 am to ragincajun03
They’re not getting drafted to war so let’s keep things in perspective.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:22 am to YeastExtract
Well yeah…if we just want to state the obvious.
But it’s still news.
But it’s still news.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:30 am to ragincajun03
quote:
A few decades ago in Louisiana, the prevailing thought amongst politicians and community "leaders" was that you were insulting a high school kid if you suggested they look into one of those types of education paths after high school. If you suggested anything other than a four year university, you were calling them stupid.
So now...here we are.
Trade schools are the way to go for 50% of high school kids. If you don't go to college for engineering/law/medical/accounting you are wasting your time. Sure, you can go and be a teacher and make $40K, but the IT jobs the kids get right out of trade school/junior college pay more than that. Everyone has a degree today. It's so bad that a degree in business is nothing more than a general studies degree from 30 years ago. Next time you call an electrician/plumber/HVAC/carpenter/mechanic/cabinet maker, take a look at the bill you get. Those skilled trades are where the money is at, they're recession proof, and you can find a job in almost any area of the country you choose to live in. Good luck with your humanities/art/gender studies degree; would you like fries with your order ?
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:31 am to ragincajun03
The graduates should move to India for 6 months, change their last name to Patel, then return and profit.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:33 am to ragincajun03
quote:OMG!! A whole 5 years?!? Going all the way back to COVID years?!?
in Five Years
This is MADNESS!
Madness, I tell you!!
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:35 am to YeastExtract
no one has been drafted in 50 years, so I’m not sure of your point.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:35 am to ragincajun03
No shite. And since the Trump administration has commenced his war against universities, graduate school is likely unavailable as well.
The Trump utopia is starting to take shape.
And the filigree in the White House is real gold.
The Trump utopia is starting to take shape.
And the filigree in the White House is real gold.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:39 am to TBoy
I’m sure we’ll all factor that in… once we adjust for your wildly obvious bias.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:40 am to ragincajun03
looking good for the billionaires though, no issues
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:41 am to ragincajun03
2008 grad. DGAF about 2026 grads.
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