It is absolutely likely. The hiring market for juniors is fucked atm.
(And if it is, what is the cause?)
How long have we been hearing about crushing affordability problems for property? And how long ago did that start moving into essentials? The COVID-era bullwhip-effect inflation waves triggered a lot of price ratcheting that has slowed but never really reversed. Asset prices are doing great, as people with money continue to need somewhere to put it, and have been very effective at capturing greater and greater shares of productivity increases. But how's the average waiter, cleaning-business sole-proprietor, uber driver, schoolteacher, or pet supply shopowner doing? How's their debt load trending? How's their savings trending?
[1] https://www.npr.org/2026/02/12/nx-s1-5711455/revised-labor-d...
[2] https://www.marketplace.org/story/2025/12/18/expect-more-of-...
Lots going on right now in the market, but IMO that retreat is the biggest one still.
Many companies were basically on a path of infinite hiring between ~2011 and ~2022 until the rapid COVID-era whiplash really drove home "maybe we've been overhiring" and caused the reaction and slowdown that many had been predicting annually since, oh, 2015.
There's a lot of perverse interests and incentives at play.
You can be an exec with 10-20% fewer random products/departments in your company, and maybe 40% fewer middle managers in the rest of them. You might even get a nice bonus for cutting all that cost! Bonuses for growth, bonuses for "efficiency" when the macro vibe shifts. Trim sails and carry on.
> We find no systematic increase in unemployment for highly exposed workers since late 2022
Also dont forget theres only so many viable revenue-generating and cost-saving projects to take. And said above - overhiring in COVID.