matters less for the job search-and-matching process than factors like candidate skills and quality and the macroeconomic environment.
When employers first started grumbling about a labor shortage, Erica Groshen, a senior economics advisor at the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations and former commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, was a little suspicious of the high number of job openings. But as she watched wages rise and job switching soar, she was sold on the phenomenon of real hiring.
"You can apply to so many more jobs, which then means that companies have to sort through so many applications — many more than they ever used to before — which means that they employ algorithms to do this sorting," Groshen said."Those algorithms are going to be fairly crude."
'GHOST JOBS' are INFECTING The Job Market | wsj via YouTube
Glad someone said it.
I was afraid something like that would happen that's just the beginning they're doing whatever they can to cover their own rear to make things look better and hope that everybody will leave them alone
That sucks!
They collecting all data about you. When you go through few job opening process, you begin to smell whether they are really looking for hiring or not. Same sh*t over and over.