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Abstract
This research investigates the mechanisms through which elite recruitment systems, specifically the "fast-track" programs in global management consultancy and investment banking, influence the accumulation of labor capital and the persistence of social stratification. While current organizational theories acknowledge educational meritocracy, there remains a significant gap in understanding how "cultural fit" and institutionalized prestige act as exclusionary filters that convert inherited social status into professional legitimacy. Utilizing a methodology of qualitative comparative case analysis focused on recruitment pipelines in London and New York (2023--2025), the study deconstructs corporate recruitment manifestos and intern-to-full-time conversion metrics. The results demonstrate a persistent "geography of prestige," where 65% of "Bulge Bracket" investment banking cohorts in New York originate from fewer than 15 elite institutions. Furthermore, the findings reveal that technical competency serves only as a baseline, while final selections are determined by "polish" and "executive presence", behavioral markers highly correlated with upper-middle-class socialization. By systematically unpacking these opaque evaluation criteria, this research highlights how contemporary corporate hiring practices inadvertently reproduce historical class divides despite formal commitments to diversity and inclusion. The impact of this study lies in its contribution to organizational sociology by providing the "Integrated Capital Conversion Model," offering a robust framework for firms to transition from pedigree-centric to potential-centric hiring. Ultimately, this model provides actionable strategies to mitigate structural inequality and foster genuine meritocracy in high-status labor markets.
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