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Colleges keep minting graduates the job market has no use for

  • snitzoid
  • 4 hours ago
  • 3 min read

Do you think I could pump out this crap every morning without my impeccable academic credentials? I had some of our greatest minds fill my head with the firehose of knowledge!


Colleges keep minting graduates the job market has no use for?

A college degree no longer guarantees the job it used to promise. The labor market is running out of roles for an overinflated credentialed class

By Anthony Lopopolo, Quartz Media

Updated July 04, 2026


The labor market doesn't want what millions of college graduates spent four years and tens of thousands of dollars acquiring. In the first quarter of 2026, 41.5% of recent college graduates were working in jobs that don't require a bachelor's degree, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and the unemployment rate for the cohort stood at 5.7%.


Ron Hetrick, principal economist at the labor market data firm Lightcast and a former Bureau of Labor Statistics economist, points to "elite overproduction" as a driver of this squeeze. The term belongs to the complexity scientist Peter Turchin, who uses it to describe a society that mints more credentialed workers than its economy can employ. The Niskanen Center compared the dynamic to a game of musical chairs in which players keep getting added but nobody ever removes a chair.


The data backs up Hetrick on both sides of the ledger. Too many graduates are chasing too few jobs built for them.


Too many college degrees for too few jobs

U.S. colleges and universities awarded about 2.1 million bachelor's degrees in 2020-21, a 20% jump over the prior decade, the National Center for Education Statistics reported. Master's degrees rose 19% over the same period, to almost 867,000, and the pipeline hasn't slowed: NCES projects that institutions will award about 2.17 million bachelor's degrees in the 2024-25 academic year.


The result is a workforce reshaped by credentials. In 2024, 42.8% of Americans ages 25 to 39 held a bachelor's degree or higher, Census Bureau data showed, up from 37.7% of all adults 25 and older just two years earlier. Lightcast's 2026 predictions report described a glut of white-collar talent and noted that nearly all net labor force growth now comes from people with a college degree. The credentialed class is now close to a majority of the workforce.


The job market hasn't grown to match. Of the more than 800 occupations for which the Bureau of Labor Statistics develops employment projections, just 178 typically require a bachelor's degree for entry, BLS data showed. Those openings are replacements for retirements and turnover, not new positions created from scratch. Set against more than two million new bachelor's degrees awarded each year, the math produces a persistent surplus of graduates chasing too few roles, a gap that shows up most starkly at the entry level, where new graduates compete directly against workers who already have years of experience in the few bachelor's-required roles that do exist.


Degree requirements for jobs that don't need one

The mismatch is made worse by credential inflation, where employers ask for degrees the job itself doesn't actually require. A Harvard Business School study conducted with Accenture $ACN +2.58% and Grads of Life found that employers had inflated educational requirements for roles that historically didn't need a degree. For a production worker supervisor, a typical middle-skill role, 67% of postings required a bachelor's degree or higher, while just 16% of workers already in the position held one. The researchers estimated that 6.2 million workers could be affected by degree inflation.


Some employers have moved to drop degree requirements from job postings since then. But announcing a change and acting on it are different things. A Burning Glass Institute and Harvard Business School report concluded that skills-based hiring hasn't significantly changed actual hiring outcomes. Degrees are required for more positions than ever, and holding one guarantees less than it used to.


The consequences land hardest on graduates themselves. The Burning Glass Institute and Strada Institute for the Future of Work found in their 2024 "Talent Disrupted" report that 52% of bachelor's degree holders were underemployed a year after graduation, working in jobs that don't require a degree. A decade out, 45% remained underemployed. The college wage premium has held up in headline terms, but the full picture is murkier. Bachelor's degree holders still earn about 75% more than high school graduates, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York determined, even as average wages for college graduates have fallen for the better part of a decade.

 
 
 

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