Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 19
U.S. Full-Time Employment Ratio Sinks to 82.6% as AI Automation Lifts Profits
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 19

U.S. Full-Time Employment Ratio Sinks to 82.6% as AI Automation Lifts Profits

7 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · May 19
  • 82.6% of employed Americans held full-time jobs in April, dropping the ratio to a pandemic-era level even as headline payrolls and stock indexes still looked strong.
  • BLS-based data cited by Advisor Perspectives showed roughly 424,000 fewer full-time jobs, about 123,000 more part-time jobs, and another rise in workers forced into part-time roles for economic reasons.
  • AI helps explain the split: Microsoft, Alphabet and Amazon have poured hundreds of billions into automation and cloud infrastructure, boosting margins while slowing hiring in white-collar roles.
  • The shift does not signal a 2020-style collapse, and demographics, student work patterns and gig jobs can distort the ratio, but it still points to weaker job quality than payroll totals suggest.
  • That erosion matters because part-time workers typically spend and borrow less, raising the risk that consumer demand, earnings and growth weaken after a stock market rally that has lifted the S&P 500 23% since January 2025.
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