A spate of high-profile job cuts is rippling through Corporate America, with Amazon, UPS and Target collectively announcing more than 60,000 reductions this year and stoking fears of an AI-fueled white-collar recession. While some executives cite artificial intelligence to justify leaner staffing, labor scholars and recruiters say many firms are “AI-washing” routine cost-cutting and strategy shifts amid softening consumer demand, rising delinquencies and multidecade-high tariff burdens. Amazon plans to eliminate 14,000 corporate roles as CEO Andy Jassy pushes a “startup” culture and redirects spending toward AI, lifting capex to roughly $125 billion. UPS has scrapped 48,000 roles tied largely to facility closures and a pivot away from lower-margin Amazon volume, with automation expected to curb future hiring more than replace existing workers. Target is trimming 1,800 corporate jobs as revenue stalls and internal complexity slows decision-making. With the government shutdown sidelining the monthly BLS report, investors have largely rewarded the belt-tightening, even as the broader economy shows signs of strain and the impact of AI varies widely by company.
Related articles:
Challenger, Gray & Christmas Job Cuts and Hiring Announcements
University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers































