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Global job posting activity offers a forward-looking signal of labor demand by indicating where employers are actively seeking talent before those intentions show up in government reports. In the fourth quarter of 2025, job posting volumes declined across all major countries and industries tracked by Bain’s AuraSM platform.
For organizational leaders, the data signals a transition from an era of abundant labor to one requiring a more deliberate strategy for workforce planning and use of AI, as automation with generative AI, once focused on lowering costs, becomes a strategic imperative and a significant component of total technology resourcing.
Four patterns in the fourth quarter carry strategic implications for how organizations access, develop, and deploy talent.
- Labor demand declined in every region. The breadth of the pullback is striking. The US saw a 32% decline in job postings; Canada fell 21%. Across Europe, Germany (–34%), the UK (–16%), and France (–21%) all contracted. Even in Asia, India dropped 29%, though Japan’s 5% decline suggests relative resilience in aging economies already calibrated to tight labor supply.
- Industry volumes also declined across the board. Every major industry contracted. But the variation shows where the recalibration is hitting hardest. Internet companies, still reassessing headcount ROI, saw the steepest drop at 55%. Retail fell 37%, reflecting both demand uncertainty and accelerating automation in warehousing and fulfillment. Even healthcare, long insulated by structural labor shortages, declined 29%. Staffing and recruiting, the canary in the labor market, dropped 28% to 5 million postings, signaling that employers across sectors are pulling back on contingent and permanent hiring alike.
- Posting turnover remains high. Companies are posting fewer jobs, but they’re filling them faster and more selectively. Closure rates remain strikingly high: 82% in human resources, 80% in staffing and recruiting, and 68% in IT services. This combination of lower volume and rapid closure suggests a market in which employers know exactly what they need and move quickly when they find it. The days of posting broadly and sorting through hundreds of applicants are giving way to precision hiring, with every role expected to demonstrate clear productivity impact.
- AI-related job postings as a share of total software job postings rose and then stabilized. While overall software hiring contracted, AI's share of posted software jobs climbed and then stabilized at 14%, a new baseline that marks AI as a structural component of workforce composition. That demand remains concentrated in technology sectors, but financial services is now one of the top five industries looking for AI talent, signaling where automation is heading next—service sectors once considered resistant, from customer support to compliance to advisory. For talent leaders, this raises a defining question for the next decade: Where do we actually need a human? The answer will be the architecture of the new workforce.
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