Remote work drives 64% of young graduate unemployment surge: NY Fed

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — Remote work accounts for 64% of the recent surge in young college graduate unemployment, according to new Federal Reserve Bank of New York research — a finding that directly challenges the prevailing assumption that AI is behind the entry-level hiring collapse.
WFH, not AI, drives the youth unemployment surge
“Remote work can explain 64 percent of the recent increase in unemployment among young college graduates,” said Natalia Emanuel, a research economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and co-author of the study alongside Emma Harrington of the University of Virginia and Amanda Pallais of Harvard.
Young college graduate unemployment rose from 3.1% in 2017-19 to 3.7% in 2022-25, while unemployment for experienced graduates fell from 1.9% to 1.8% over the same period.
The divergence held along a clear structural line: young workers in remotable occupations saw unemployment rise by nearly 1 percentage point, while those in non-remotable occupations remained steady — directly implicating distributed work, not the broader labor market, as the source of the problem.
Mentorship costs drive employers away from junior hires
The researchers found that firm-level data showed workers received significantly less feedback and mentorship when physically separated from colleagues — a cost that falls disproportionately on less-experienced workers who need the most managerial investment.
“The rise of remote work has meaningfully contributed to the recent challenges facing young college graduates,” the researchers wrote.
Remote work prevalence increased four-fold since the pandemic, making distributed arrangements the dominant operating mode in precisely the occupations — white-collar, knowledge-based roles — where junior hiring has fallen most sharply.
The researchers compared remotable occupations such as software engineering against non-remotable roles such as mechanical engineering to isolate the WFH effect from other labor market factors.
Return-to-office policies correlated directly with increased hiring of junior staff — providing causal evidence that physical proximity, not economic conditions, is the primary lever controlling entry-level demand.
The NY Fed findings run straight into BPO’s core operating model. Offshore staffing providers operating in shared physical offices preserve the supervisory density that employers are now demonstrably unwilling to sacrifice in remote environments.
BPO operators who can demonstrate in-person delivery environments with structured mentorship pipelines hold a structural advantage in recruiting and developing the early-career workforce that clients can no longer bring through their own distributed organizations.

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