ExplorerEconomicsEconomics
Research PaperResearchia:202601.20013

The Algorithmic Barrier: Quantifying Artificial Frictional Unemployment in Automated Recruitment Systems

Ibrahim Denis Fofanah

Abstract

The United States labor market exhibits a persistent coexistence of high job vacancy rates and prolonged unemployment duration, a pattern that standard labor market theory struggles to explain. This paper argues that a non-trivial portion of contemporary frictional unemployment is artificially induced by automated recruitment systems that rely on deterministic keyword-based screening. Drawing on labor economics, information asymmetry theory, and prior work on algorithmic hiring, we formalize t...

Submitted: January 20, 2026Subjects: Economics; Economics

Description / Details

The United States labor market exhibits a persistent coexistence of high job vacancy rates and prolonged unemployment duration, a pattern that standard labor market theory struggles to explain. This paper argues that a non-trivial portion of contemporary frictional unemployment is artificially induced by automated recruitment systems that rely on deterministic keyword-based screening. Drawing on labor economics, information asymmetry theory, and prior work on algorithmic hiring, we formalize this phenomenon as artificial frictional unemployment arising from semantic misinterpretation of candidate competencies. We evaluate this claim using controlled simulations that compare legacy keyword-based screening with semantic matching based on high-dimensional vector representations of resumes and job descriptions. The results demonstrate substantial improvements in recall and overall matching efficiency without a corresponding loss in precision. Building on these findings, the paper proposes a candidate-side workforce operating architecture that standardizes, verifies, and semantically aligns human capital signals while remaining interoperable with existing recruitment infrastructure. The findings highlight the economic costs of outdated hiring systems and the potential gains from improving semantic alignment in labor market matching.


Source: arXiv:2601.14534v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2601.14534v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2601.14534v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2601.14534v1

Please sign in to join the discussion.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Access Paper
View Source PDF
Submission Info
Date:
Jan 20, 2026
Topic:
Economics
Area:
Economics
Comments:
0
Bookmark
The Algorithmic Barrier: Quantifying Artificial Frictional Unemployment in Automated Recruitment Systems | Researchia