The reason, to my eyes, is twofold. First, human nature: humans love to be reassured; you know, being "on the safe side". “Experience” brings that false sense; HR people and management are content.
Is it possible to start a careers section for inexperienced programmers?
It's certainly technically possible. I don't think it'd be a good idea as that would be validating a false premise (false to me, obviously): experience is only gained in the workplace and only experienced people make good devs. Generally speaking, it's probably true, but there are many exceptions.
My point is that experience brings no certainty, only a possibility, only a trend. The people who write the job descriptions still have to realize that, and have the possibility and liberty to act on that realization. I guess someone has to be accountable when the new hire turns out to not be up to the expectations: "but he has x years of experience" is a perfect excuse in such cases.
Second reason: the people who write the job descriptions are not always technical people who actually know what they are writing about. Hence the "8 years' experience in nodeJs" as cited by someone, or requirements about 10 years experience with Spring boot or AngularJs. Or, even more ludicrous from an actual contact I've had, 5 years of experience with a specific patch version of extJs that had probably been the active version for only a few weeks or months.
If I were to hire someone, I would look at a few things:
- salary demands: do they fit the budget or compensation package that I have/can afford? If not, can we work something out?
- what has that person already done? I don't care whether it's in the workplace, in their own company or in their free time, for instance on an open source project. In all cases, it is experience; who ever said that experience can only be gained in the workplace as an employee in an n-people team?
- familiarity with general software engineering concepts instead of specific tools, frameworks and languages.
- actual code written and general attitude towards code, which is why I think the developer story is a great idea.
- general attitude towards learning new things, either by themselves or by being trained by a co-worker.
- general attitude towards documentation: do they write it or and do they use it?
And I'd try to gauge their motivation for the job even though I'm perfectly aware that I'm fallible at that task. That's it.
I wouldn't look at:
- diplomas, degrees or certifications (especially not certifications), even though I have a PhD and it has been a major pain to get (really hard years getting it while working full-time, worst years of my life).
- prior experience with a specific tool, framework or language.
- how confident they look or sound during the interview.
- anything intangible: I don't trust subjective judgment.
I think one cannot correctly judge other skills that are considered useful or nice to have in the workplace: too much subjectivity and prejudice, and too many preconceptions.
All this digression, which barely scratches the subject of what's wrong in IT recruitment, leads me to this: the only people who can give you an explanation of what companies ask for are HR people, managers, team leaders, etc. who write those job descriptions as of course, they were born directly to X years of experience. I guess.
My advice: if possible, join open source projects soon. Learn, rack up some years, and become good by the time you hit the job market.
Last words, the only upside is that you can later use the situation to your advantage. Moreover, people who now no longer have to go through that "experience demands" loop have all started somewhere with zero job experience. Ergo, it's possible to start: we all did :-)