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388 points pseudolus | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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tootie ◴[] No.43485931[source]
Everybody is commenting about AI, but that's barely mentioned in the article. In particular there is this quote:

> The gap in wages between those with a college degree and those without one grew steadily beginning in 1980, but flattened during the past 15 years, though it remains high.

I suspect there's a lot of factors at play and the expansion of access to college is part of it. The value of secondary education is somewhere diluted. There is the end of the zero interest era. There is massive layoffs of federal workers which skew heavily towards knowledge work. And some of it is was Starbucks cites as "removing layers and duplication and creating smaller, more nimble teams" which is a pretty normal cyclical thing where an era of expansion and promotions makes your org to top-heavy and bureaucratic so you trim aggressively and probably end up rehiring some as needed. Like a controlled burn of an overgrown forest. And if some of those are permanently lost to AI then that's a bonus.

I think a lot of business leaders are just expecting a recession and want to be on good footing before it hits.

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1. bjornsing ◴[] No.43492231[source]
Personally I think it’s because a university degree used to be a proxy for cognitive ability and conscientiousness. Now that many more people have them that’s less true. The market is starting to realize and we’ll see some “corrections” going forward.