Gen Z is not booing AI; It is booing its own job market
May 20, 2026 – 7:29 am
Eric Schmidt, former Google CEO, addressed a stadium full of University of Arizona graduates, stating that artificial intelligence’s impact would be "larger, faster, and more consequential" than past experiences. Despite his attempt to reassure, boos echoed through the arena.
Twelve days prior, at the University of Central Florida, Gloria Caulfield, a real-estate executive, faced similar backlash during her commencement speech, using the phrase "the next industrial revolution."
The students’ reaction wasn’t about generational confusion with technology; it was about the realization of their job market’s realities. They understood that AI was displacing entry-level white-collar jobs at an alarming rate.
Consider these facts:
- Bill McDermott, CEO of ServiceNow, predicted in March that new-college-graduate unemployment could reach 30% within two years as AI takes over entry-level tasks.
- Goldman Sachs research in April found approximately 16,000 US jobs being lost monthly to AI, with Gen Z bearing the brunt of this displacement.
- The Dallas Federal Reserve reported a significant widening of the unemployment gap between entry-level and experienced workers post-pandemic, particularly in AI-substitutable occupations.
- Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic (a leading enterprise AI company), has forecast that AI could eliminate up to half of all entry-level white-collar jobs.
These insights are readily available online, accessible through a simple Google search.
What sets this generation apart is not their skepticism of new technology but the timing of their entry into the job market as these changes become publicly discussed and quantified.
Standard Chartered’s Bill Winters shared his plans to cut over 15% of back-office roles by 2030, citing AI integration as a reason for the restructuring. Meta also announced job cuts in the same week, focusing on AI-related reorganizations under CEO Mark Zuckerberg.