Today we are diving into a question that has been dominating conversations across technology, business, and education: what is artificial intelligence actually doing to the job market right now?For years, headlines have warned about mass automation and widespread unemployment. But the real story unfolding in 2026 is more complicated. A new analysis from BCC Management looks beyond AI’s theoretical abilities and focuses on something far more important: how companies are actually using these systems in the workplace.The findings reveal a surprising shift. Overall unemployment has not surged, yet hiring patterns are changing in ways that are hard to ignore. In highly AI-exposed industries, entry-level hiring for workers aged 22 to 25 has dropped by about 14 percent. And unlike earlier waves of automation that threatened factory floors and routine manual labor, this disruption is landing squarely on white-collar professions. Programmers, legal professionals, and other highly educated workers are now feeling the pressure.The report also points to a growing divide in the future of work. AI is transforming cognitive and analytical tasks, while robotics continues to challenge physical labor. In other words, the technologies reshaping work are moving along two different tracks, affecting different workers in different ways.So what does this mean for businesses, new graduates, and the broader economy? Is this the beginning of a labor crisis, or are we witnessing the early stages of a gradual restructuring of how work gets done?In this episode, we break down the data, explore what is really happening inside companies adopting AI, and ask a critical question: if artificial intelligence is not eliminating jobs overnight, how is it quietly reshaping the path into the workforce?Let’s get started. 🎙️🤖📊