On the surface, the U.S. job market looks healthy. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) the unemployment rate sits at 4.4%, which is low by historical standards (1,2).
But beneath that headline figure, a more troubling picture is forming for white-collar workers. And if you’re employed right now, it’s worth paying attention.
Business Insider recently profiled Scott, a man who spent over two years applying to more than 1,600 jobs, taking 78 interviews and burning through his savings before finally landing a position — a six-month contract two levels below his former senior manager role, at half his previous salary. “Accepting this is going to set my career back five years,” he said (3).
And his story is far from unique.
Data from workforce analytics firm Revelio Labs shows that 40% of white-collar workers who switched jobs at the end of 2025 took salary cuts of more than 10% — the highest in at least 10 years. The share receiving similarly large raises is at its lowest point in the same period (3).
The white-collar job market is experiencing a grimmer reality that the low unemployment rate simply doesn’t capture.
In February, the U.S. economy shed 92,000 jobs (1). Companies like Atlassian and Block announced recent cuts, and Meta plans to remove 20% of its workforce, Business Insider reports (3,4).
The number of long-term unemployed (those out of work for at least 27 weeks) reached 1.9 million in August 2025, up 385,000 over the year, according to BLS data (5). Long-term unemployment now accounts for roughly a quarter of all unemployment, the highest share since February 2022.
The supply-demand imbalance explains much of it. In December, when Scott accepted his position, he was among 7.5 million unemployed Americans and just 6.6 million jobs. With that kind of competition, employers have gotten pickier — requiring more years of experience for open roles, particularly at the mid-career and senior levels, Revelio Labs found (3).
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Here’s the personal finance reality that makes this more than just a labor market story: taking a significant pay cut doesn’t just hurt you now, but it can hurt you for years.