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FedEx CEO says we are in the middle of the biggest supply chain shift he’s seen in 35 years: ‘We are the referendum’

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He sold his last company to Palantir. Now he's betting $32 million that robots can fix construction's labor crisis
SuccessCareers

Gen Z’s hiring hell is real: 1 in 3 employers admit they’re replacing entry-level roles with AI—and tech and manufacturing jobs are most at risk

Preston Fore
By
Preston Fore
Preston Fore
Success Reporter
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Preston Fore
By
Preston Fore
Preston Fore
Success Reporter
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June 26, 2026, 11:03 AM ET
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AI is eating entry-level jobs fast. And a new survey of 600 recruiters shows an MBA may no longer be the escape hatch it once was.Jose Calsina
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For Gen Z, the job market has looked more resilient than many feared. The unemployment rate hasn’t skyrocketed, and some of the bleakest predictions about AI wiping out entry-level jobs—including warnings from Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman—have been tempered by a labor market that has held up better than expected.

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However, a new report from the Graduate Management Admission Council is throwing a wrench into that optimism.

One-third of employers say they are replacing entry-level jobs with AI, according to GMAC’s latest Corporate Recruiters survey, which polled more than 600 recruiters worldwide. More than half of the respondents recruit for Fortune 100 or Fortune 500 companies.

It’s an indication that Gen Z’s fears are becoming reality: the first ring of the career ladder is genuinely getting harder to reach.

Technology roles are most exposed, with 40% of employers in the industry saying AI is replacing entry-level positions, closely followed by manufacturing.

Yet Sabrina White, senior vice president of school & industry engagement at GMAC, said Gen Z shouldn’t interpret the findings as a reason to avoid AI. Instead, she argued, the report underscores the importance of learning to use the technology to create business value.

“Employers are increasingly using AI to automate routine tasks in areas like coding, data processing, and customer service, but they continue to invest in talent that can apply judgment, solve problems, and help organizations navigate change,” White told Fortune in an email.

“Historically, technology shifts have changed jobs more than they eliminate them—and employers are signaling that this transition will be no different.”

An MBA can still pay off—but it’s no longer a guaranteed shortcut for Gen Z

Historically, when the labor market sours, workers often head back to school to sharpen their skills—and that trend is showing up again. Applications to graduate business programs jumped 13% in 2024 and another 2% in 2025, as professionals looked to gain an edge in an increasingly competitive hiring market.

But an MBA isn’t the guaranteed career accelerator it once seemed—especially when many top programs can cost well into six figures.

Just 13% of employers surveyed said they hired more MBA graduates in 2025 than they did the year before. Hiring also came in below employers’ own expectations across several business degrees. For example, while 74% of employers expected to hire graduates with a master’s in finance, only 68% ultimately did.

Pay may also be leveling off. The median starting salary for MBA graduates is estimated to slip to $120,000 this year from $125,000 in 2025. Median starting salary estimates also dipped for bachelor’s degree holders (from $75,000 to $72,000) and experienced hires coming directly from industry (from $110,000 to $107,500).

Still, the long-term value of a top MBA hasn’t disappeared altogether. For graduates of some programs the payoff can still be substantial. For example, at Harvard, MIT, and Wharton, graduates are making over $245,000 just three years after earning their degrees.

According to White, employers aren’t souring on graduate business education altogether. Instead, at a time when companies are rethinking headcounts, the bar is being raised for what they expect graduates to bring to the table.

“Confidence in graduate business education remains extraordinarily strong because employers see these graduates as uniquely equipped to navigate complexity, make decisions in uncertain environments, demonstrate high cross-cultural competency, and translate emerging technology into business impact,” White said. “What stands out to me is that employers aren’t lowering expectations—they’re raising them.”

CEOs are still betting on young talent—but the job description is changing

That shift is showing up well beyond business schools.

Several prominent CEOs (including those at IBM, AWS, and autonomous trucking startup Waabi) have recently said they remain bullish on hiring young talent. Some have even argued that early-career workers can be more advantageous hires than more experienced employees because they’re more comfortable adopting new AI tools, eager to learn, and less constrained by legacy ways of working.

Today, employers still rank human skills—including communication, problem-solving, and adaptivity—as their top priorities when hiring, according to the GMAC survey. But over the next five years, recruiters expect AI proficiency and technology skills to climb sharply in importance.

“What employers appear to be saying is not that communication, interpersonal skills, or strategic thinking matter less—it’s that technical and AI fluency are becoming additional expectations…” White said.

“The future of work belongs to people who can not only command technological capability but also communicate ideas, align teams, and make decisions.”

The Fortune 500 Innovation Forum will convene Fortune 500 executives, U.S. policy officials, top founders, and thought leaders to help define what’s next for the American economy, Nov. 16-17 in Detroit. Apply here.
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Preston Fore
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Preston Fore is a reporter on Fortune's Success team.

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