Where Did all the Teen Summer Jobs Go?

Ahead of next week’s May employment report, the summer jobs market is coming into focus as teenagers and students finish the school year. According to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, teen hiring from May through July is expected to total just 790,000 jobs this summer, down slightly from 801,000 last summer. If realized, that would be the weakest summer for teen hiring in the history of the Bureau of Labor Statistics data, which begins in 1948. Last summer was already the prior low; before that, the weakest readings were in 1949, in the post-war demobilization period, and in 2010, in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.

That historical context is important. Unlike 1949 or 2010, last year’s weak teen hiring did not coincide with a recession, and a recession is not our baseline for this year either. In our view, the weakness in teen summer employment looks less like a traditional recession signal and more like the result of structural changes in teen labor supply colliding with a more cautious hiring environment. Since the early 2000s, teen labor force participation has fallen significantly as shown in the chart below. Although it has recovered somewhat in recent years, it remains well below the levels that prevailed for much of the second half of the 20th century. A large part of that decline likely reflects changing priorities among students and families. Summer jobs now compete with AP coursework, test preparation, college admissions activities, club sports, camps, internships, volunteer work and other structured activities that are often viewed as part of the college and career-building process.

At the same time, summer employment remains an important steppingstone for younger and entry-level workers. These jobs provide early exposure to the workforce, helping teens develop soft skills such as communication, teamwork, responsibility and time management. They also give young workers a better understanding of workplace expectations, professional environments and the day-to-day realities of different industries and career paths. For many, a summer job serves as a first opportunity to build confidence, establish work habits, gain financial independence and develop practical experience that can benefit them later in their careers.

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