By Vivek Soundararajan
Publication Date: 2026-02-11 18:28:00
For a long time, the deal was pretty simple for a variety of careers. Entry-level employees completed routine tasks in return for mentoring, skills development, and a clear path to expertise.
The agreement meant employers had an affordable workforce while workers received training and a clear career path. Both sides benefited.
But now that deal is falling apart. AI automates the grunt work – the repetitive, boring but essential tasks that juniors used to do and learn from.
And the consequences affect both ends of the workforce. Young workers cannot gain a foothold. Older workers are watching the talent pipeline dry up.
For example, one study suggests that between the end of 2022 and July 2025, the number of entry-level jobs in the US in AI-vulnerable fields such as software development and customer service fell by about 20%. Employment of older workers in the same sectors increased.
And this pattern makes sense. AI is currently excelling at administrative tasks…