If you are interested in the recording end (engineering, producing, etc.) you will likely have to start on the ground floor - probably for very little or no pay. Making coffee, buying donuts, cleaning toilets, etc. - if you do that for a few months maybe you can become an assistant engineer (setting up mics, running cables, etc.) - if you do all those things well, stay out of the way, keep you eyes and ears open and you mouth shut - maybe you'll get a chance to engineer a couple of low profile sessions. If you do that well, maybe you will climb up the chain.
The industry has always been hard and it is much harder now than ever (I started as a musician in the 60's and started in studios - as a musician not as an engineer - in the early 70's - so I've watched over 40 years of changes).
There will always be some opportunities for a select few - but I know a lot of really good engineers that are lucky if they make more than $15,000-$20,000 in a given year (normally a lot less) - with crappy hours, no insurance, etc. etc.
But if you are serious and dedicated and talented - then get your name out there and take any opportunity that comes along no matter how trivial it may seem. Pay your dues and maybe you can be one of the fortunate few.
Also keep in mind - there can be many other jobs in the "recording industry" - everything from tour support, advance work (setting up radio interviews, etc.) and even things like accountants and bookkeepers - you can work in the recording industry and not be an engineer.