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Goldman Sachs Internship Acceptance Drops Below 1%

Goldman Sachs Internship Acceptance Drops Below 1%

The incoming cohort of 2,500 interns spans 90 nationalities and 500 universities, reflecting a strategic shift in recruitment. Jacqueline Arthur, Goldman’s head of human capital management, noted that the firm no longer relies solely on narrow pipelines from elite schools. Instead, the current class includes three-time Olympians, accomplished musicians, and nonprofit founders. This departure from traditional hiring profiles emphasizes qualities like judgment, adaptability, and emotional intelligence—traits the firm views as increasingly difficult to replicate as AI becomes standard in the workplace.

This heightened barrier to entry mirrors a broader trend across elite finance and consulting, where firms are narrowing their pipelines to favor efficiency. JPMorgan, for instance, reported an acceptance rate of just 0.7% for its 2025 intern class. For Goldman, the internship program serves as a critical long-term investment; 40% of the firm's current partners began their careers through campus recruiting. As the bank recalibrates from pandemic-era expansion, it continues to treat these summer roles as the primary engine for future leadership, rather than mere temporary staffing.

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