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Lucrative jobs you can walk into today with NO experience and NO degree… and some pay over $100,000

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It’s been a bleak stretch for the American jobs market. 

Layoffs are ripping through the economy as companies automate with AI, grapple with stubbornly high interest rates and post rising corporate earnings after letting staff go. 

Employers handed out 153,074 pink slips last month – the biggest October total in more than two decades, per Challenger, Gray & Christmas. That’s created a brutal squeeze of too many applicants and not enough roles.

And the pressure grew again today as the latest jobs report showed the labor market continues to cool, confirming that hiring has slowed sharply across much of the economy. 

Liz Bentley, an independent consultant and workplace expert, told the Daily Mail: ‘From the job-seeker side, the stories are tough.

‘Many mid-career professionals are on the market for four to nine months, sending out hundreds of applications – sometimes 200 to 400 -before getting traction.’ 

Yet even as landing a job gets harder, a few sectors can’t hire fast enough – and some of those roles pay six figures or do not require a college degree. 

Here are some of the fastest-growing job titles in America, according to an analysis of government data from 2020 through 2024 by Plus Docs

Hospitals can’t hire midwives fast enough - and can pay six-figure salaries for the role

Hospitals can’t hire midwives fast enough – and can pay six-figure salaries for the role

While most hiring snapshots track open vacancies, many of which never lead to an actual hire, these figures look only at positions that were actually filled.

That makes the dataset one of the clearest reads on where Americans are really finding work.

Hospitals have been ramping up hiring of midwives, Plus Docs found, more than doubling the number of Americans with this job since 2020. 

Midwives – nurses who care for women during pregnancy, labor, and the postpartum period – need a graduate degree in the sciences and earn about $131,000 a year. 

The explosive 260 percent growth figure does not surprise analysts: ‘Companies can’t hire enough nurses and care coordinators,’ Bentley said. 

Plus Docs’ findings also line up with recent ZipRecruiter data on the past year’s job postings. The hiring firm told the Daily Mail that a quarter of its most in-demand roles are in the medical field. 

Lab researchers – scientists and mathematicians funded by tech firms, medical companies and universities – were another fast-growing, six-figure job title, pulling in around $161,000 a year. 

Applicants typically need a bachelor’s degree and about five years of experience.  

Data from the BLS shows a massive spike in new ambulance driver hires from 2020 through 2024. The job title saw a 130 percent bump

Data from the BLS shows a massive spike in new ambulance driver hires from 2020 through 2024. The job title saw a 130 percent bump

Dancers and choreographers also snapped up 17,000 jobs, a 143 percent increase in four years. The often-competitive career saw a huge bump in hiring after Covid-era restrictions shut down public events that hired live performers

Dancers and choreographers also snapped up 17,000 jobs, a 143 percent increase in four years. The often-competitive career saw a huge bump in hiring after Covid-era restrictions shut down public events that hired live performers

Liz Bentley, an independent consultant and workplace expert, told the Daily Mail that entry-level candidates are being squeezed hardest

Liz Bentley, an independent consultant and workplace expert, told the Daily Mail that entry-level candidates are being squeezed hardest

But not every booming role requires a diploma or years of training.

Automotive tire makers, picture editors, construction steel workers, dancers, machine operators, ambulance drivers, and railway track workers have all been hired in droves with only a high school education and minimal experience. 

But even with so many fast-growing fields no longer requiring degrees, Bentley says technological change is making it harder for people to get that first foot in the door. 

‘What’s surprising is that senior-level roles are holding strong while junior postings are down about 7 percent from last year,’ she told the Daily Mail.  

‘Entry-level candidates are actually the ones being squeezed the hardest.’ 

Meanwhile, Plus Docs found that several job titles at the bottom of the company career ladder have fallen sharply since the federal government’s 2020 jobs tally. 

American companies hired 88 percent fewer metal makers, 80 percent fewer poll surveyors, and 75 percent fewer animal control workers. 

They attribute the steep decline to a years-long push toward robotics and AI.  

‘Traditional roles are rapidly declining, largely due to automation,’ Daniel Li, Plus Doc’s chief executive and co-founder, told the Daily Mail. 

‘Innovation, societal needs, and technology are reshaping the job landscape, creating opportunities in some sectors while reducing demand in others.’

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