Young Americans Are More Pessimistic About the Job Market Than Peers in 86 Other Countries
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What makes the finding especially notable, as Gallup’s Benedict Vigers points out, is that the problem isn’t simply that young Americans are pessimistic. It’s that older Americans remain unusually upbeat while younger workers have lost faith rapidly. Young Americans ranked 87th out of 141 countries for job market optimism among the under-35 cohort. That’s a historic reversal for a country where young workers have traditionally been among the most confident globally.
The decline has been steep and sudden. The share of younger Americans saying it was a good time to find a job dropped 27 points between 2023 and 2025, a pace comparable to the collapse seen during the 2007-2009 financial crisis. The steepest pessimism is concentrated among college-educated young adults and those who haven’t yet secured full-time employment. That’s counterintuitive on the surface (these are the workers who did what was expected of them, earned degrees, built credentials), and yet they’re the most discouraged. Entry-level hiring has become significantly more competitive, companies are demanding more experience for junior roles, and AI anxiety has added a layer of uncertainty about whether the traditional career ladder still functions the way it used to.
For employers trying to attract early-career talent, this data has practical implications. The pipeline of young workers entering the market is increasingly skeptical, and that skepticism is affecting how they evaluate opportunities. Companies that invest in transparent career progression, early mentorship, and real AI training will have a meaningful advantage in attracting the cohort that feels most locked out of the market right now.
The Conference Board’s Employment Trends Index Just Broke Its 2025 Pattern
The Conference Board’s Employment Trends Index rose to 105.77 in April, up from a revised 105.52 in March, a modest but meaningful improvement that snaps the downward drift that characterized most of 2025. Seven of the index’s eight components contributed positively, the broadest improvement in months. As Conference Board Economist Mitchell Barnes put it: “The index’s recent stability is a notable break from the ETI’s downward drift throughout 2025.”
The ETI is a forward-looking composite of eight labor market indicators, designed to signal the direction of payroll employment in the months ahead. The April reading was supported by improving signals across several components: the share of consumers saying jobs are “hard to get” fell to 19.8%, the lowest of the year; small businesses reporting positions they can’t fill rose to 34%, the highest since June 2025; initial unemployment insurance claims averaged near historic lows at 203,300; and temporary-help employment improved for the fourth consecutive month.
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59% of Workers Say Their Job Harms Their Mental Health
A 2026 Monster survey of 1,000 employed U.S. workers found that 59% say their job negatively impacts their mental health at least once a month, and 46% report experiencing burnout tied directly to work-related stress. 71% say they’ve stayed in a job they knew was toxic; most of them not by choice, but because financial pressure or limited alternatives left them feeling stuck.
The causes workers point to are organizational failures. Increased workload and understaffing topped the list at 39%, followed by poor management (33%), work-life balance issues (30%), workplace conflict (28%), and stagnant pay (26%). Fear of layoffs came in at 21%, a number that’s likely grown as AI-related restructuring announcements have accelerated through Q1 and Q2. About 37% say they can’t discuss mental health openly at work without consequences, and 44% don’t believe leadership is held accountable for toxic behavior.
The retention implication is direct. A toxic manager can quietly undermine recruiting efforts, drive up turnover costs, and damage employer brand reputation faster than most leadership teams realize. We’ve tracked the connection between employee sentiment and retention risk throughout this year, and the Monster data adds another data point to a consistent pattern: workers are not only evaluating salary and flexibility anymore, but also management quality, workload sustainability, and whether speaking up feels safe. The employers who understand that culture is now a recruiting variable are the ones building workforces that don’t need to be rebuilt every 18 months.
Frequently Asked Questions
Entry-level hiring has grown more competitive, companies are demanding more experience for junior roles, and AI anxiety is adding uncertainty about traditional career paths. The steepest pessimism is concentrated among college-educated young adults who haven’t yet secured full-time work, people who followed the expected path and are still finding doors harder to open.
It’s the largest of any country Gallup surveyed. Only 43% of Americans ages 15-34 said it was a good time to find a job in 2025, versus 64% of those 55 and older, a 21-point gap. Globally, younger adults are typically more optimistic than older ones. The U.S. now inverts that pattern entirely.
A forward-looking composite of eight labor market indicators published monthly, designed to predict the direction of payroll employment in the months ahead. April’s reading of 105.77 broke a downward trend that ran through most of 2025, with 7 of 8 components contributing positively.
Monster’s 2026 survey points to organizational factors, not personal ones. Increased workload and understaffing (39%), poor management (33%), and work-life balance struggles (30%) top the list. Workers aren’t rejecting demanding work; they’re rejecting chronic understaffing, unclear expectations, and environments where speaking up feels risky.
