Breaking 16:20 OpenAI launches a $10 billion joint venture to embed AI in private equity firms 16:00 Wildfires spread across the Northern Hemisphere weeks ahead of schedule 15:38 Iranian supertanker carrying $220 million in crude breaks through US naval blockade 15:20 Bitcoin stalls near $78,000 as Binance logs five days of stablecoin outflows 14:55 Germany maps US potash dependency as potential lever in trade standoff 14:37 Oil shock and Wall Street euphoria put global economy on recession watch 13:42 US backs Lai after surprise Eswatini visit draws sharp rebuke from Beijing 13:20 Dubai airport traffic collapses 66 percent in March as regional war disrupts Gulf aviation 13:03 Rockstar Games developers allege unpaid overtime amid GTA 6 crunch at India studio 11:45 Fifa faces world cup broadcast crisis as India and China deals remain uncertain 11:21 Jet fuel crisis grounds airlines worldwide as Spirit Airlines shuts down operations 11:00 Pakistan facilitates return of Iranian cargo ship crew seized by the United States 10:30 New Mexico seeks changes to Meta platforms in youth harm trial 10:04 United Airlines Boeing 767 strikes lamppost and truck while landing at Newark airport 09:30 AI chipmaker Cerebras targets strong valuation in US IPO push 09:04 Chanel Cruise 2026/27 backstage beauty looks reveal key makeup trends 08:15 German carmakers hit by new US tariff increase 08:00 The Kremlin tightens security around Putin amid fears of internal coup 07:42 Apple tests a streamlined Modular dial for watchOS 27

Tech CEOs increasingly cite AI to justify mass layoffs

Monday 30 March 2026 - 08:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Tech CEOs increasingly cite AI to justify mass layoffs

An increasing number of technology executives are using artificial intelligence as a justification for sweeping job cuts, even as their companies report record revenues. In recent weeks, leaders at Google, Amazon, Meta, Pinterest, and Atlassian have announced or signaled workforce reductions, framing these layoffs as an inevitable consequence of growing AI capabilities rather than a reaction to financial pressure.

Jack Dorsey, CEO of Block, offered one of the most explicit examples in February, when he said the fintech firm would cut more than 4,000 jobs—about 40 percent of its workforce. In a letter to shareholders, Dorsey wrote that “AI tools have changed what it means to build and run a company” and that “a much smaller team, using the tools we are building, can do more and do it better.” Block had already carried out at least two prior rounds of layoffs without mentioning AI; investors greeted the latest move by driving the company’s stock up more than 20 percent in after‑hours trading.

Meta followed a similar pattern, cutting several hundred employees on March 25 across its Reality Labs, Facebook, recruitment, sales, and global operations divisions. This marked the company’s second round of layoffs in 2026, after about 1,000 roles were eliminated in Meta’s Reality Labs in January. CEO Mark Zuckerberg set the tone earlier this year, declaring that “2026 will be the year that AI radically changes how we work.” At the same time, Meta plans to spend between 115 billion and 135 billion dollars in capital investments this year, much of it directed toward AI infrastructure.

Atlassian announced 1,600 job cuts on March 11, amounting to roughly 10 percent of its employees, to “self‑fund” its AI investments. CEO Mike Cannon‑Brookes acknowledged that “it would be dishonest to pretend that AI is not changing the mix of skills we need or the number of roles required in certain areas.” Pinterest confirmed around 675 layoffs, or about 15 percent of its staff, as part of a shift toward what it calls an “AI‑first” strategy.

Not everyone accepts AI as the main driver behind these cuts. Technology investor Terrence Rohan told the BBC that attributing layoffs to AI is “a more appealing narrative” than admitting companies simply want to cut costs. Roger Lee, founder of the layoff‑tracking site Layoffs.fyi, noted that shrinking headcount can help offset the enormous sums firms are spending on AI infrastructure. Researchers at The Conversation have drawn a distinction between two kinds of reductions: cases where AI genuinely replaces specific tasks and cases where employees are let go to finance AI investments. Meta, with potential cuts of up to 20 percent of its workforce while spending hundreds of billions on data centers, exemplifies that tension.

Still, some evidence does support claims of rising productivity. A study published in Science found that AI‑generated code in the United States rose from 5 percent in 2022 to 29 percent by late 2024. Google chief Sundar Pichai said more than a quarter of new code at the company is now AI‑generated, and GitHub Copilot produces about 46 percent of code on average for its users. Anne Hoecker, a partner at Bain & Company overseeing its technology practice, offered a measured view, telling the BBC that “the narrative is shifting, and we’re really starting to see meaningful productivity improvements” and that “executives are starting to recognize that these tools are advanced enough to get the same work done with basically fewer people.”

Whether AI is a genuine catalyst for these cuts or a convenient justification, the pace of job reductions is not slowing. Data from RationalFX shows that more than 45,000 tech jobs have been eliminated worldwide since January, with roughly 9,200 directly tied to AI and automation.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.