The AI economy is rewriting the American Dream — and blue-collar workers are poised to win
CNBC Top News ·

From the Dayton, Ohio, suburbs to boardrooms in Dallas, the employees fueling AT&T' s next wave of growth aren't fresh-faced college graduates with expensive four-year degrees. …
From the Dayton, Ohio, suburbs to boardrooms in Dallas, the employees fueling AT&T' s next wave of growth aren't fresh-faced college graduates with expensive four-year degrees. They're skilled, blue-collar workers ready to get their hands dirty — and AT&T can't find enough of them. "We need people who know how to actually work with electricity. We need people who understand photonics. We need people who can go into folks' homes and connect this infrastructure to make it work right," AT&T CEO John Stankey told CNBC during a recent interview from the company's Dallas headquarters. "We find that we've got to go out and find them, train them, and incent them to come in," he said. "It's not like we're growing them on trees in the United States." AT&T's dilemma — hunting for blue-collar workers at a time when a record number of college students are projected to graduate this spring — underscores the palpable crisis facing new degree holders as the first wave of the AI revolution hits the U.S. economy . For much of the postwar era, the American bargain was clear: Go to college, get a degree and claim your place in the middle class. As factories gave way to offices and the U.S. economy increasingly rewarded credentials over physical labor, a four-year diploma became one of the clearest symbols of upward mobility. But as AI spreads across corporate America and begins to absorb the entry-level work that once gave graduates their start, that promise is beginning to fracture. …
Original source: CNBC Top News
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washington dc · Michigan · Jensen Huang · United States · World Economic Forum