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Peter Thiel and Anthropic Say AI Favors ‘Word People’—but New Jobs Data Reveals a Surprising Reality


Tech leaders like Peter Thiel say AI may favor strong communicators over technical specialists. But new data shows liberal arts graduates still earn far less than their STEM peers.


For years, the conventional wisdom was clear: learn to code, secure your future. Students were steered toward programming and STEM fields, while liberal arts majors were cautioned about uncertain career prospects. 

Artificial intelligence is now upending that narrative.

As AI tools become increasingly capable of writing code, analyzing datasets, and automating technical workflows, some technology leaders argue that the economic advantage long held by quantitative fields may be narrowing—while skills rooted in the humanities—writing, communication, critical thinking, and storytelling—could become more valuable than ever.

> "It seems much worse for the math people than the word people," Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel observed in a 2024 conversation with economist Tyler Cowen, suggesting that AI may automate technical problem-solving faster than it can replicate nuanced human communication.

This perspective isn't isolated. Palantir CEO Alex Carp holds a PhD in philosophy. Anthropic co-founder Daniela Amodei, who studied literature, recently told ABC News that AI makes humanities training more relevant, not less.

What the Data Shows: Demand Is Shifting

Labor market signals appear to support this view. LinkedIn's *Skills on the Rise 2026* report identified communication, leadership, and people management among the fastest-growing skill demands across U.S. industries. Job postings mentioning "storytellers" have doubled in the past year.

"Companies are increasingly looking for great communicators, because strong writing, clarity, and judgment still matter," a LinkedIn spokesperson told *Fortune*.

In an economy where AI can generate technical outputs at scale, the premium may shift toward workers who can translate complex ideas, persuade stakeholders, build consensus, and lead teams through ambiguity—capabilities often cultivated in liberal arts education.

 The Persistent Pay Gap

Yet despite growing employer interest in "human" skills, the financial reality for many liberal arts graduates remains difficult.

A February 2026 report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, analyzing 2024 U.S. Census data, found that full-time workers ages 22–27 with degrees in humanities and education fields earn some of the lowest median incomes in the labor market—$45,000 or less, below the national individual median of $45,140.

 Lowest-Earning Majors (Ages 22–27)

| Major | Median Annual Earnings |

|-------|------------------------|

| Pharmacy | $40,000 |

| Theology and religion | $41,600 |

| Social services | $43,000 |

| Performing arts | $44,000 |

| General education, Early childhood education, Elementary education, Liberal arts, Biology, Leisure and hospitality, Psychology, Anthropology, Art history, Fine arts | $45,000 |

Education-related fields dominate the lower end of the earnings spectrum, partly because many graduates work in public-sector roles where wage growth tends to lag behind the private market. A 2025 Economic Policy Institute report confirmed that teachers earn significantly less than comparable college-educated workers in other sectors.

By contrast, technical degrees continue to deliver substantially higher compensation. Engineering graduates typically earn around $75,000 within five years of graduation, with median earnings surpassing $100,000 by mid-career. Chemical engineering majors report median incomes near $135,000 annually.

 Lowest-Earning Majors (Ages 35–45)

Even with experience, certain fields show limited earnings growth:

| Major | Median Annual Earnings |

|-------|------------------------|

| Early childhood education | $52,000 |

| Elementary education | $55,000 |

| General education | $56,000 |

| Special education | $56,000 |

| Social services | $60,000 |

| Miscellaneous education | $60,000 |

| Secondary education | $62,000 |

| Anthropology | $65,000 |

| Family and consumer sciences | $65,000 |

| Theology and religion | $66,000 |

| Health services | $67,000 |

| Nutrition sciences, Treatment therapy | $70,000 |

| Psychology, Fine arts | $72,000 |

 The Tension at the Heart of the AI Era

We are witnessing a paradox: employers increasingly say they value judgment, narrative skill, and emotional intelligence—yet compensation structures still heavily favor technical credentials.

AI may elevate the strategic importance of "word people," but the labor market has not yet rewired its reward system to match. For now, the safest financial path still runs through STEM.

This disconnect raises critical questions:

- If AI automates technical execution, will the ability to frame problems, communicate vision, and navigate human complexity become the new premium skill—and will wages follow?

- Can liberal arts graduates leverage their training in an AI-augmented economy, or will structural wage gaps persist regardless of shifting demand?

- And for workers already in the market: how do you cultivate both technical fluency and human-centric skills to stay resilient?

One thing is clear: the definition of "job security" is being rewritten. The workers who thrive may not be those who code best or write best in isolation—but those who can bridge both worlds, using AI as a tool while anchoring their value in distinctly human capacities: curiosity, ethics, context, and connection.

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