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Hey, hope you’ve had a great week. The most recent jobs report told us the long-term unemployment rate is rising, so today we’re going to meet some of these folks struggling in a “low-fire, low-hire” market, and get some tips for those coping with a grueling job hunt. 

The latter comes from our podcast “This Is Uncomfortable,” which returned this week with two brand-new episodes. Listen and subscribe wherever you get podcasts. Also in today’s newsletter: A new Fed chair frontrunner,  price discrimination at national parks and MLK Jr.’s economic legacy. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor

(PS: Even if you’re not looking for a job, the data tells us you likely know someone on the hunt. Will you share this email with them? Thanks.) 
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Young people are hit hard by low-fire, low-hire job market
Early career setbacks can leave scars that last long into adulthood. Marketplace’s Stephanie Hughes spoke with young folks going through this struggle, and experts who study it.

By the time Bella, 24, graduated from the College of Charleston last spring with a degree in psychology, she knew she didn’t want to be a psychologist. So, she started looking for any kind of job.

“Sales, receptionist, food and beverage, anything!” she laughed. 

Bella’s been applying for positions since August. “Marketplace” did not use her full name because she’s concerned it could hurt her job prospects.

She blocks out time for her search, spending up to four hours on job boards every day. 

“They make it very easy to apply for jobs on there, you can just upload your resume and click apply,” she said. “But I think with that, these companies probably see a lot of people applying that way.”

She’s applied for about 30 positions, but hasn’t landed an interview. 

“It feels like a cycle to me, where I feel depressed because I don't have a job, and then I go and apply to some things, and then not hear back,” she said. “Then it just starts over — ‘Oh, I'm depressed because I don't have a job. Oh, I didn't hear back from them,’ and then it just kind of repeats itself.”

Bella was caught up in a cooling job market in which employers aren’t laying many workers off, but they’re not hiring new ones either.

That’s hit young people hard. The unemployment rate in December among people aged 20 to 24 was 8.2%. That’s almost one percent higher than where it was a year ago, and also way above the unemployment rate of people in their prime working years between the ages of 25 to 54. 

“Who is vulnerable to weak hiring? People that are coming into the workforce for the first time,” said economist Guy Berger, a senior fellow at the Burning Glass Institute. “Whether they're high school graduates in their late teens, or associates degree completers in their very early 20s, or college grads — these groups have really gotten hammered.”

Berger said it’s possible AI is taking some of these entry level jobs. But he thinks for the most part, employers are just sitting tight. 

“This just hits people that need a job more than people that already have a job,” he said. “Who needs a job almost more than anybody else? Somebody who just finished school.”

That hit at the beginning of a career can create a scar that lasts a person’s whole life. UCLA economics professor Till von Wachter said that when young people enter the workforce during a recession, it takes more time for them to land in the right place. 

“It takes a while to find that good job, and then it takes a while to reaccumulate those skills, and you're just behind,” he said. 

That has knock-on effects. 

READ MORE


 
News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Wall Street ended the week down, but still close to record highs. The S&P 500 closed 0.1%, lower Friday, while the Dow lost 0.2% and the Nasdaq fell 0.1%.

  • Know who will be hiring? Construction firms. A new report estimates global infrastructure spending will hit $85 trillion in the next 15 years, and there aren’t enough workers to build all that.

  • The federal government took stakes in two new companies this week. These state-capitalism-style deals provide a stock market boost, for now.

The Trump administration

  • A new frontrunner emerged to succeed Fed Chair Jerome Powell after President Donald Trump told White House economist Kevin Hassett he’s good where he is.

  • Trump threatened new tariffs for countries that don’t “go along” with his plans to take over Greenland.

  • The Department of Education delayed wage garnishment and other methods to crawl back late payments from student loan borrowers.

  • International visitors to some of the most popular national parks will have to pay an additional fee, up to $100 a person.

Your money

  • Grocery prices are still rising quickly, and consumers are still stinging from nearly 30% grocery inflation since 2020. Still, the government claims Americans can stick to the new food pyramid while only spending about $10 per day. A couple reporters hit the store to test that theory. 

  • Using the free or budget-tier ChatGPT? Get ready to see ads based on your conversations.

  • A Los Angeles landlord asks prospective tenants their star sign before renting them a home. Is that a charming quirk, or illegal housing discrimination?
Take the Marketplace news quiz!
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LET'S GO
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"Get together with other people who are looking for work … just to feel like you can do this. You can just sit next to each other on your laptops and apply for jobs together, and it's so much better than doing it by yourself."
—  Rachel Mead Smith, writer of the job search newsletter Words of Mouth and editor of the forthcoming book “Search Work.”

On the latest episode of our podcast “This Is Uncomfortable,” host Reema Khrais got practical job hunting tips from Smith and career coach Phoebe Gavin. Among them: Keep up your hobbies, lean on your community and don’t vent on LinkedIn.

Martin Luther King Jr. leads the march on Washington in 1963. From our vantage point we can see a massive crowd. Some of their signs read
AFP/Getty Images
Final note
From the Marketplace archives

Quick programming note: This newsletter will take off Monday, Jan. 19, for Martin Luther King Jr. Day, but Marketplace will still be on public radio stations and podcast apps as usual.

Meantime, I suggest revisiting our 2023 interview with historian and author Robin D.G. Kelley. It’s a great conversation examining the civil rights movement as not only a political and social justice movement, but an economic one as well.

“America has given the Negro people a bad check, a check which has come back marked ‘insufficient funds,’” King said in the opening moments of his “I Have A Dream” speech, which you can hear in full here. “But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt.”
 
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