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Crush the industry tab8/13/2023 Still, certain shareholders have been vocal about their desire to see head counts trimmed - and trimmed further still. economy added hundreds of thousands of jobs last month. Jassy wrote that “Amazon has weathered uncertain and difficult economies in the past, and we will continue to do so.” Microsoft’s Satya Nadella noted that “some parts of the world are in a recession and other parts are anticipating one.” “We hired for a different economic reality than the one we face today,” Google CEO Sundar Pichai said in his layoff announcement. The executives overseeing the cuts, for their part, cite adverse economic circumstances. ![]() The question is: Why have many of the most profitable companies of our generation - most of which are still very much profitable - announced staggering rounds of layoffs, one after the other? And why now?Ī common refrain from analysts and reporters is that the companies are “tightening their belts” after profligate pandemic hiring sprees, in order to streamline operations. If the laid-off tech workers formed a city, it’d be one of the most populous in the United States, bigger than Des Moines or Salt Lake City. According to an industry layoff tracker, the tech sector has eliminated some 220,000 jobs since the start of last year. This follows 2022’s bloodbath, when tens of thousands of jobs were lost at Meta Platforms, Twitter and Salesforce. IBM looks to be next, with nearly 4,000 workers on the chopping block. Within weeks, Microsoft revealed it was slashing its head count by 10,000 and Google said that it was terminating 12,000 employees. Just a few days into 2023, Amazon Chief Executive Andrew Jassy announced that there would be 18,000 layoffs across the company. ![]() In Silicon Valley, the new year began as the last one ended - with tens of thousands of tech workers losing their jobs.
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