Meta layoffs signal AI-driven job risks worldwide

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — Meta’s announcement to cut roughly 15,000 jobs has reignited global concern about artificial intelligence (AI) reshaping the workplace.
According to a report from TheStreet, while Big Tech may seem far removed from most employees’ daily lives, the forces driving these layoffs are already influencing industries and incomes far beyond Silicon Valley.
AI reshapes workforce across industries
Reuters reported in March 2026 that Meta’s senior executives were directed to plan workforce reductions of roughly 20%, translating to approximately 15,000 positions out of 79,000 employees, CNBC noted.
The company’s AI-related capital expenditure for 2026 is projected between $115 billion and $135 billion, nearly double 2025’s spending.
Meta called the report “speculative,” but did not deny that workforce planning discussions were underway.
Meta is not alone. Block CEO Jack Dorsey cut 4,000 employees early in 2026, citing AI’s ability to replace human tasks, while Amazon eliminated 16,000 corporate roles in January amid a push to expand AI infrastructure.
Outplacement firm Challenger, Gray, & Christmas found AI was cited in 12,304 job-cut announcements in just the first two months of 2026, up from 5% for all of 2025.
“February’s dip is a nice reprieve from the elevated job cut plans to start the year,” said Andy Challenger, the firm’s chief revenue officer.
“With U.S. involvement in a growing war in Iran, the end of Q1 may bring more layoff plans as companies tighten belts amid uncertainty and higher costs,” Challenger added.
Data shows mid-level management, IT, and customer support roles face the heaviest impact, while entry-level positions are frozen as AI handles routine tasks.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas reported that employment in computer systems design declined 5% since the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022. Software developers aged 22 to 25 saw a roughly 20% decline from their late-2022 peak.
Preparing for an AI-driven future of work
Experts emphasize that while AI-driven layoffs are accelerating workforce restructuring, they also highlight the need for workers to adapt.
“Some companies have been ‘scapegoating AI,’” said Taylor Stockton, Chief Innovation Officer at the United States Department of Labor.
Others, like Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin, suggest people will be “enabled” by AI rather than simply displaced.
Financial preparedness and skill adaptation are critical. Workers are urged to build emergency savings, develop transferable non-routine skills, and diversify income streams.
Brookings Institution research notes that employees with judgment-based and relationship-management skills adapt faster after displacement.
The IMF adds that job postings requiring emerging skills pay up to 15% more in the United Kingdom and 8.5% more in the U.S.
Meta’s layoffs are a signal, not a sentence. As AI accelerates changes across industries, workers who invest in financial resilience and adaptive skills are better positioned to navigate the evolving future of work.

Independent




