May 22, 2026 2:42 pm EDT
|

For the first time in maybe ever, being older at work might actually be an advantage.

I’ve watched it for 40 years. Anytime a company starts trimming, gray hairs are first out the door. Higher salaries, “outdated” skills, closer to retirement — boom, severance package.

That just changed. And the reason is the thing everyone’s been told would kill our jobs: artificial intelligence.

A recent global survey of 415 CEOs from Oliver Wyman and the New York Stock Exchange shows the corner office is doing a complete 180 on hiring.

A year ago, executives were planning to bulk up on junior workers. Now they’re planning to cut them and lean harder on experienced ones.

Here’s what the data actually shows, why it’s happening, and the catch you need to see coming.

1. The hiring plans flipped fast

The Oliver Wyman survey found that over 40% of CEOs plan to slash junior positions in the next year or two and tilt their workforce toward middle and senior employees instead. Only 17% want to bump up their junior headcount.

A year ago? Those numbers were essentially reversed.

That isn’t a trend. That’s a U-turn at 80 miles an hour. And it happened in 12 months.

2. AI agents are eating the entry-level work, not yours

Here’s why. AI agents can already write code at junior-developer quality, evaluate sales leads, and crank out the basic analyst tasks that used to feed the entry-level pipeline.

What they can’t do, according to labor experts, is make the kind of judgment calls that come from actually doing the job for 20 or 30 years.

Ravin Jesuthasan, a consultant and author on the future of work, told Bloomberg that companies are increasingly saying they want someone who’s already been through it — because that worker’s experience, wisdom, and critical thinking make her far more valuable than a rookie.

Translation: AI handles the rookie tasks. The veterans handle the calls AI can’t.

Quick gut-check — if your money advice is coming from random online influencers, you’re playing a dangerous game. I’ve been a CPA since 1980 and writing about money since before the internet existed. Sign up for the free Money Talks Newsletter and get expert advice that’s been tested by time.

3. Two major university studies say the same thing

This isn’t just a survey of CEO opinions. The data backs it up.

Stanford University researchers, using payroll data from ADP covering millions of U.S. workers, found that workers between 22 and 25 in occupations most exposed to AI — like software development and customer service — saw a 16% relative drop in employment since late 2022.

Older workers in those same fields? Stable or growing.

A separate Harvard paper analyzed resume data on 62 million workers across 285,000 firms. After companies adopted generative AI, the researchers saw junior hiring fall off a cliff while senior headcount held steady.

Two different datasets. Same story. AI is hollowing out the bottom of the corporate ladder while leaving the top intact.

4. IBM is the rare outlier — and that’s telling

IBM is one of the few big companies pushing back. The tech giant said in February it plans to triple entry-level hiring in the U.S. this year — but it’s rewriting those job descriptions from scratch, focusing new hires on supervising AI, handling customers, and the tasks machines flub.

Most other companies aren’t following suit.

Microsoft’s analysis of the jobs most threatened by AI found that knowledge work — exactly the kind of roles entry-level hires used to fill — sits at the top of the danger list.

The lesson for older workers: Companies still want humans to babysit the machines. They just want those humans to be experienced.

5. Don’t pop the champagne — older workers aren’t safe either

Here’s the catch, and don’t skip it.

Just because AI is tipping the scale toward experience today doesn’t mean your job is bulletproof tomorrow.

Teresa Ghilarducci, a labor economist at the New School, told Bloomberg that “firms’ commitment to workers is weaker and weaker.” The same companies cutting juniors today can absolutely turn on seniors next quarter if the math changes.

And here’s the bigger problem nobody in the C-suite wants to talk about: If you stop hiring juniors today, where do your mid-level managers come from in five years?

A workforce of all veterans and no rookies doesn’t work. AI doesn’t grow into a manager. People do — and they have to start somewhere.

What to do right now

If you’re an older worker, this is your moment — but treat it like a window, not a guarantee. A few things to do this week:

  1. Learn AI. Don’t fight it. Use it. Be the one who can manage a team of agents, not the one who fears them.
  2. Document your judgment. Make your experience visible. The reason your CEO wants you is the judgment you’ve built up over decades — make sure your boss knows it.
  3. Stay paranoid. As Ghilarducci’s warning suggests, companies will cut older workers the second AI gets good enough. Don’t get comfortable.

If you’re a younger worker, the bar just got higher. Don’t ask AI to do your job. Use AI to do your job faster — and spend the time you save building the judgment that older workers already have.

If you’re looking to make a move, there’s a growing list of companies that actively prefer hiring older workers. Use the moment.

The job market just flipped. Whether it stays that way is up to you.

Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version