DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Goldman Sachs says companies are getting better at hiring — and doing less of it

March 17, 2026
in News
Goldman Sachs says companies are getting better at hiring — and doing less of it
A crowd of people in the street.
Fewer early job exits suggest companies are getting better at matching workers with the right roles, according to a Goldman Sachs analysis. Yellow Dog Productions/Getty Images
  • Hiring has slowed, but firms are getting better at matching workers to jobs, according to Goldman Sachs.
  • The economists found that fewer early job exits suggest both sides finding better matches.
  • Tools like LinkedIn and AI may help firms avoid bad hires, reducing churn in the labor market.

Hiring has slowed sharply across many advanced economies, but companies may simply be getting better at picking the right people, according to Goldman Sachs.

That’s due in part to a decline in short-term job separations: workers leaving or losing jobs soon after being hired. That decrease suggests firms and workers are increasingly finding better matches from the start, even as labor markets cool after the post-pandemic hiring surge.

“Most of the pullback in churn reflects a decline in job separations within one or two quarters after hiring, a pattern that suggests that workers and firms have gotten better at identifying ‘good’ matches over time,” Goldman’s economists wrote in a Tuesday note.

Historically, short-term separations have been common because some hires turn out to be poor matches between employers and workers. However, they have steadily fallen across developed economies over the past two decades, and the decline accelerated after the pandemic.

The trend is borne out by US Census Bureau data and Canadian labor force data.

Fewer bad hires

The decline appears broad across industries. It’s explained by changes in the workforce composition, suggesting a structural shift in how workers and firms form job matches.

“In our opinion, the best explanation of the decline in short-term separations is that increased information and improved screening processes have increased both firms’ and workers’ ability to identify ‘good’ matches,” wrote the Goldman economists.

Platforms such as LinkedIn, Glassdoor, and Indeed give workers insight into company culture and working conditions before they accept a role. At the same time, employers are increasingly using digital screening tools — including AI — to evaluate candidates and screen applicants.

Those tools may help reduce hiring mistakes, the economists wrote.

Better matches mean fewer early job exits — and less need for companies to hire replacements.

The shift could also make the labor market more efficient overall. With fewer failed job matches, there is less frictional unemployment — the type of joblessness that occurs when workers move between jobs.

Goldman’s analysis comes amid debate about the current labor market, which some economists describe as a “low hiring, low firing” environment.

In such an environment, a further drop in hiring could push unemployment higher more quickly because displaced and younger workers have fewer opportunities.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Goldman Sachs says companies are getting better at hiring — and doing less of it appeared first on Business Insider.

Heart-stopping moment rescuers swoop in on man trying to jump from LA overpass
News

Heart-stopping moment rescuers swoop in on man trying to jump from LA overpass

by New York Post
April 12, 2026

A man who tried to jump from a freeway overpass in Los Angeles was saved in the nick of time ...

Read more
News

Trump booed at UFC event as Vance announces Iran negotiations have failed

April 12, 2026
News

Dodgers’ Blake Snell enjoys throwing live batting practice after clapping back at critics

April 12, 2026
News

US, Iran fail to reach peace agreement after marathon talks in Pakistan

April 12, 2026
News

An AI built a boutique with $100,000, then panicked when no one showed up to work

April 12, 2026
U.S. Moves to Deport Son of Prominent Figure in Iranian Revolution

U.S. Moves to Deport Son of Prominent Figure in Iranian Revolution

April 12, 2026
Forest Hills Homeowners Win $150,000 in Battle Over Concert Noise

Forest Hills Homeowners Win $150,000 in Battle Over Concert Noise

April 12, 2026
David Sklansky, ‘Mathematician’ of High-Stakes Poker, Dies at 78

David Sklansky, ‘Mathematician’ of High-Stakes Poker, Dies at 78

April 12, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026