Full-Time Employment Drops to 82.6% — Post-COVID Low as AI Boosts Corporate Profits While Hollowing Out White-Collar Jobs
The S&P 500 is up 23% since Trump returned to office, but the share of Americans in full-time jobs has fallen to 82.6% — the lowest since the COVID recovery. AI is expanding corporate margins while slowing white-collar hiring, widening the gap between market performance and underlying labor quality.

- full-time employment has fallen to 82.6%, the lowest since the COVID recovery, even as the S&P 500 is up 23%
- AI is expanding corporate margins while slowing white-collar hiring — widening the gap between market performance and real economic health
The S&P 500 is up 23% since Trump's return to office in January 2025. But the share of Americans in full-time jobs has slipped to 82.6% — pandemic-era recovery levels. The headline jobs number looks fine. The quality of those jobs does not. AI is boosting corporate profits while slowing white-collar hiring.
U.S. markets in 2026 look bulletproof. The S&P 500 has gained more than 23% since Trump returned to office in January 2025, propelled by AI infrastructure spending, strong corporate earnings, and tax and deregulation tailwinds. But beneath the headline gains, a closely watched labor quality indicator just sank back to levels not seen since the pandemic-era recovery.
Full-Time Employment at 82.6% — Lowest Since COVID Recovery
April's jobs report looked solid on the surface. Jobs were added, unemployment stayed near historic lows. But Bureau of Labor Statistics data shows that only 82.6% of employed Americans hold full-time jobs. That leaves 17.4% working part-time — the weakest full-time ratio since the COVID recovery period.
- April full-time employment change: ~-424,000
- April part-time employment change: ~+123,000
- Involuntary part-time workers (for economic reasons): rising
- Full-time employment share: 82.6% (post-pandemic low)
- U-6 broad unemployment rate: gradually trending higher
The issue is not just the number — it is the direction. When full-time employment contracts while part-time rises, consumer spending typically softens one to two quarters later. Full-time workers spend more, borrow more, and drive discretionary demand. Part-time workers pull back. This shift does not show up immediately in earnings reports.
AI Expands Corporate Margins While Slowing White-Collar Hiring
This labor quality deterioration coincides with corporate America's AI-driven automation push. Microsoft, Alphabet, and Amazon have collectively committed hundreds of billions to AI infrastructure over the past two years. Investors rewarded that spending with repeated record highs.
But productivity gains often come with labor displacement. AI is currently reducing administrative headcount, customer service roles, coding tasks, and marketing functions — or at minimum slowing the pace of hiring in white-collar industries that traditionally generated high-paying full-time jobs. The effect shows up not as layoffs but as fewer open roles.
"AI infrastructure spending is rising sharply, corporate profit margins are expanding, stock market indexes are near record highs — and full-time employment share is declining. That divergence deserves investor attention."
The Gap Between Markets and the Real Economy
The picture is not entirely grim. Demographics partially explain the trend — older Americans increasingly prefer flexible work, student employment fluctuates, and gig economy participation distorts traditional labor measurements. The current weakness resembles gradual erosion, not the outright collapse of 2020.
But the 82.6% full-time employment ratio still represents a meaningful decline from healthier post-pandemic levels. Economies built on strong consumer spending need strong full-time employment to sustain growth. If the divergence between stock market performance and employment quality continues widening, the gap will eventually close through weaker consumer demand and corporate earnings.
- AI capex (Big Four hyperscalers 2026): ~$725B
- Corporate profit margins: expanding
- S&P 500: near record highs
- Full-time employment share: 82.6%, falling
- Part-time employment: rising
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does the full-time employment ratio matter?
The full-time employment share measures the quality of jobs, not just the quantity. Full-time workers consume more, borrow more confidently, and underpin consumer spending. When this ratio falls, discretionary demand typically weakens one to two quarters later.
How significant is the current 82.6% reading?
It is the weakest full-time employment share since the COVID recovery period (2021-2022). Pre-pandemic healthy labor markets sustained ratios above 85%.
How is AI connected to the decline in full-time employment?
Big tech companies investing hundreds of billions in AI are reducing administrative, customer service, coding, and marketing headcount — or slowing hiring in those roles. The effect appears as fewer new jobs, not mass layoffs.
If the S&P 500 is up 23%, why worry?
The concern is the divergence between market performance and underlying labor quality. AI is expanding corporate profit margins while compressing the full-time employment base. A weakening consumer foundation eventually flows through to lower discretionary spending and corporate earnings.
What is the U-6 unemployment rate?
U-6 is the broad unemployment measure that includes officially unemployed workers plus those who have stopped looking and involuntary part-time workers. It is a more complete picture of labor market stress than the headline unemployment rate.
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