Remote Work Worsens Job Prospects for Young Grads, Study Finds
June 1, 2026
A New York Federal Reserve study finds remote-capable jobs have widened unemployment gaps for recent college graduates relative to older workers, with about a one-point uptick in unemployment for young grads in remote roles from the 2017–2019 period to 2022–2024.
The data describe a low-hire, low-fire market where layoffs are rare, but job seekers struggle to land new roles.
There’s evidence of a pandemic-era pattern where at least one Fortune 500 company hired fewer inexperienced workers due to mentorship and training challenges, a trend possibly repeating with widespread remote work.
Experts warn policy and firm practices may need in-office or closely supervised environments to better train youth and reduce long-term scarring in the early career phase.
Even in firms that embrace remote work, limited in-person interaction can reduce feedback for newcomers, impacting long-term career outcomes.
On-site presence remains important for collaboration and mentorship, which can mitigate negative effects of remote work, according to Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom.
Overall, hiring and training methods in remote environments require rethinking to better recruit, onboard, and develop young talent.
Findings suggest entry-level development and mentorship are more effective in in-office settings, altering early-career prospects for new graduates.
Fortune 500 proprietary data indicate proximity to colleagues boosts feedback, mentorship, and performance, with remote setups linked to less training for less-experienced workers.
Firm-level observations echo larger trends: closer proximity enhances mentorship and feedback, while remote arrangements hinder junior workers’ development and job prospects.
Patterns from a Fortune 500 company show reduced feedback and mentorship in remote work, negatively affecting young workers’ performance and development.
Researchers emphasize understanding distance-related pitfalls for worker development and the challenge of securing necessary training in scarce-job markets.
Summary based on 17 sources
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Sources

Yahoo Finance • Jun 1, 2026
Remote work — not AI — may be to blame for young college grads' job market woes
AP News • Jun 1, 2026
Young and unemployed? Remote work, not AI, may be the problem, study finds | AP News
Economic Times • Jun 1, 2026
Young and unemployed? Remote work, not AI, may be the problem, study finds