The AI/Labor Report
A translator in Brighton, England has watched her corporate press release work disappear. A London cinematographer is retraining as an outdoor instructor for minimum wage. These are not Americans, but the pattern behind their situations is the same one reshaping the U.S. labor market. A Morgan Stanley report published in late May [https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20260527-my-job-is-going-uk-workers-squeezed-out-by-ai] found that British companies that adopted AI cut their workforces by 8% in the year ending October 2025. That rate exceeded comparable figures for Germany, Japan, and Australia. Listen on Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-ai-labor-report/id1896663061] The IMF estimates that more than two-thirds of British workers perform tasks AI can potentially carry out. Services make up 80% of the UK economy. That combination makes the UK the most AI-exposed major economy outside the United States. The workers disappearing from its labor market are the same kinds of workers disappearing in America. AI Is a Cover Story. An MIT Professor Put a Number on It. A Fortune piece published May 31 [https://fortune.com/2026/05/31/tech-companies-ai-washing-layoffs-wix-block-snap-atlassian-disposable-workers/] quotes Paul Osterman, a professor of human resources management at MIT Sloan and the author of a book literally titled Disposable Workers. Osterman’s argument is that companies have used technology as a cover story for workforce reduction for 20 years. AI is simply the most convenient version of that cover story available right now. Disposable Workers are people whose employment relationship gives them no meaningful protection against restructuring decisions. When Cisco announced 4,000 cuts last month, its stock jumped 13%. The market rewarded the announcement, which tells you what the market thinks the layoffs are actually about. Osterman estimates that 35% of the American workforce now qualifies as “disposable workers.” That 35% figure is not a projection. It describes the current state of employment for roughly 58 million Americans. BUY NOW! [https://wimdodson.gumroad.com/l/gods_in_the_machine?_gl=1*19da5a0*_ga*MTEwMjE2MDkwMy4xNzc2OTY4MDQy*_ga_6LJN6D94N6*czE3NzY5NjgwNDEkbzEkZzEkdDE3NzY5NjgxNzIkajU5JGwwJGgw] Get the NEW Book that exposes the Narratives Tech uses to build its AI Empire. $4.95 flat fee for Kindle, Nook, Tablets, and Mobile. No subscription required.3.5-hr reading time. Two States Just Put Employers on Notice Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont signed SB 5 on May 30 [https://news.bloomberglaw.com/daily-labor-report/connecticuts-lamont-signs-ai-law-with-employer-notice-mandate], making Connecticut one of the first states in the country to require employers to disclose in their WARN Act filings whether a mass layoff is related to AI or other automation. The requirement takes effect October 1, 2026. Starting in October 2027, employers must give workers written notice before using AI tools that play a “substantial role” in hiring, promotion, or termination decisions. Violations are enforceable by the state attorney general. Harvard’s OnLabor noted on June 1 [https://onlabor.org/june-1-2026/] that the law puts Connecticut alongside California, Colorado, and Illinois as the only states with meaningful AI employment protections on the books. No federal equivalent exists. Instead, the Trump administration has attempted to block similar state laws through threatened loss of federal funding and litigation. The four-state patchwork is the full extent of American worker protection against AI-driven employment decisions. The EU’s equivalent rules take effect August 2. American workers employed by multinationals operating in Europe may soon have more legal protection at their European offices than at their U.S. desks. China Made It Illegal. Canada Like the Idea. Courts in Hangzhou and Beijing ruled in late April [https://www.caixinglobal.com/2026-04-30/chinese-courts-rule-companies-cannot-fire-workers-simply-to-replace-them-with-ai-102439602.html] that companies cannot terminate employees simply because AI can perform the same job at lower cost. The anchor case involved a quality assurance supervisor whose employer tried to cut his monthly pay from 25,000 to 15,000 yuan after AI automated his role. When he refused, the company fired him. The court ruled the termination illegal. The reasoning matters: AI adoption is a strategic business choice, not an unforeseeable event. Chinese labor law allows contract changes for unforeseeable disruptions. A planned technology decision does not qualify. Canadian legal analysts and the Global News outlet noted [https://globalnews.ca/news/11840683/ai-china-layoffs-court-ruling-canada/] that the Chinese ruling reignited debate about in Canada about whether Western governments are failing workers in this area. The honest answer for Canada and the U.S. is yes. The Chinese motivation may be social stability as much as worker welfare. Nevertheless, the ruling’s effect on workers is real either way. The H-1B Clock Is Running The displacement wave at Oracle, Cognizant, and Amazon hits Indian tech workers in the United States with a second consequence that American outlets are mostly missing. The AI/Labor Report is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Oracle’s restructuring cut an estimated 12,000 roles [https://www.storyboard18.com/photos/brand-marketing/ai-layoffs-2026-amazon-meta-oracle-cisco-among-tech-firms-cutting-jobs-98910.htm] from teams based in India or staffed by Indian nationals in the U.S. Cognizant cut between 12,000 and 15,000 positions to shift toward automated delivery models. For workers on H-1B visas, a layoff triggers a 60-day window to find a new employer willing to sponsor them. Miss the window, and the visa expires. These workers face AI displacement and immigration jeopardy simultaneously. They fall outside most U.S. labor displacement data. Their situation is the clearest current example of a workforce segment absorbing the full cost of the AI transition with no policy buffer in place. BUY NOW [https://wimdodson.gumroad.com/l/invasion_ai?_gl=1*g1iey2*_ga*OTc1NjU2NTcyLjE3NzQwMzA3NjM.*_ga_6LJN6D94N6*czE3NzQwMzMyMjUkbzIkZzEkdDE3NzQwMzQ2ODgkajYwJGwwJGgw]! Get the book that examines how the AI invasion already happened. You just weren’t invited. $9.95 flat fee for Kindle, Nook, Tablets, and Mobile. No subscription required. 2-hr reading time. Get full access to The AI/Labor Report at ailabor.substack.com/subscribe [https://ailabor.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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