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AI Job Cuts: They’re Firing the Kids and Keeping the Vets

AI-driven job cuts disproportionately target young tech workers aged 22-25, whose employment in high-exposure roles dropped 6-11% since late 2022, while older workers saw gains of 6-13%. Meanwhile, 75% of unemployed Americans don't apply for unemployment benefits, and only 55% of applicants receive them, creating a broken safety net that could amplify hardship as AI displacement accelerates.

read2 min publishedJun 15, 2026

Three-quarters of unemployed Americans don’t even apply for unemployment benefits—a shocking gap that’s about to collide head-on with AI’s targeted job destruction. While tech executives predict mass layoffs ahead, the workers getting axed right now are discovering that the safety net everyone assumes exists is more like a badly maintained trampoline.

Young Tech Workers Bear the Brunt #

Early-career developers and customer service reps face the steepest AI-driven job losses.

Research from ADP and Stanford tracking AI adoption found employment for workers aged 22-25 in high-exposure jobs—think software development and customer support—has dropped 6-11% since late 2022. Meanwhile, older workers in identical roles saw employment grow by 6-13%. The pattern is brutally clear: AI isn’t eliminating entire professions, but it’s systematically removing the bottom rungs of career ladders.

Companies adopting AI heavily are actually growing overall, hiring about 6% more workers while quietly shedding junior positions. Your entry-level coding job gets automated while senior architects become more valuable. This isn’t the robot apocalypse—it’s surgical workforce restructuring that leaves recent graduates holding the bag.

The Benefits System Nobody Uses #

Complex eligibility rules and employer resistance keep most jobless workers from claiming support.

Here’s where the math gets depressing. Of those who do apply for unemployment insurance, only 55% actually receive benefits. Employers contest about a quarter of claims—they have direct financial incentives since successful claims raise their UI tax rates. The process becomes quasi-legal warfare exactly when workers can least afford a fight.

The biggest barrier isn’t rejection—it’s that 55% of non-applicants assume they’re ineligible. Many quit rather than getting fired, others worked contract gigs, some exhausted benefits previously. The rules are genuinely complex, but the assumption of ineligibility often proves wrong. Union members apply at twice the rate of non-union workers because someone actually explains the system to them.

When Targeted Disruption Meets Broken Safety Nets #

AI’s surgical job cuts create the exact scenario unemployment insurance was designed to handle—workers displaced through no fault of their own needing temporary support. But when 75% don’t apply and half of applicants get denied, even modest disruption amplifies into genuine hardship. If AI displacement accelerates as predicted, this systemic failure could turn manageable transitions into economic scarring for an entire generation of workers.

The unemployment system worked during COVID when expanded and simplified. The infrastructure exists—it just needs updating for an economy where career entry points vanish overnight.

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