The AI/Labor Report
Uber had a busy week. On June 3, the company cut 23% of its People and Places division [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/03/uber-layoffs-people-division-ai.html]. The division covers human resources, recruiting, workplace facilities, and corporate culture. The official explanation was organizational complexity and overlapping responsibilities. The company was careful to say artificial intelligence played no role in the decision. Days earlier, Uber’s chief technology officer disclosed the company had burned through its entire 2026 AI coding budget in four months [https://www.techtimes.com/articles/317842/20260605/uber-cuts-23-hr-staff-new-president-denies-ai-role-95-engineers-use-it-daily.htm]. Ninety-five percent of Uber’s engineers use AI tools every month. Close to 70% of committed code is now generated by AI systems. Uber still lists more than 800 open positions. The company is reorganizing, not shrinking. The division being restructured happens to be the one that manages human workers. Now, AI tools handle a large share of the work human workers used to support. Earlier in the year, Deutsche Bank analysts coined a term for this pattern: AI redundancy washing [https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/uber-ai-budget-job-cuts-1801340]. It describes companies that use AI as the stated reason for cuts when the real drivers are more complicated. The Uber case is the cleanest example yet of both dynamics running at the same time. On June 2, OpenAI announced that Codex, its AI coding agent, now has more than 5 million weekly users [https://openai.com/index/codex-for-knowledge-work/]. Developers are still the largest group, but knowledge workers now represent 20% of users and are growing three times faster than developers. To accelerate that shift, OpenAI released six role-specific plugins targeting data analytics, creative production, sales, product design, equity investing, and investment banking [https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/02/openai-launches-new-codex-tools-for-white-collar-work/]. Each plugin integrates directly with coporate tools like Salesforce, Jira, and Notion. The move mirrors a similar enterprise push from Anthropic earlier this year. So, OpenAI has designed tools that approximate specific jobs. The list of roles in those six plugins covers a substantial portion of what mid-level office workers at large companies spend their days doing. One in five Codex users today is already a non-developer. That share is growing faster than any other segment. Governments in general are watching the AI drama unfold and are still moving slowly. California is moving faster than most. On May 21, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order N-6-26 [https://www.gov.ca.gov/2026/05/21/governor-newsom-signs-first-of-its-kind-executive-order-to-prepare-workers-and-businesses-for-potential-ai-disruption/], directing state agencies to evaluate whether the state can update California’s WARN Act to catch AI-driven workforce reductions before they happen rather than after. WARN is the law that requires advance notice for mass layoffs Recommendations to the governor’s office are due in 180 days. A separate California bill, SB 951 [https://www.reedsmith.com/our-insights/blogs/employment-law-watch/102mx9t/whats-new-in-californias-response-to-ai-workforce-disruption/], would require 90 days advance notice before any AI-driven layoff affecting 25 or more workers. The federal government has no equivalent law. No employer anywhere in the United States currently faces a legal obligation to disclose whether AI drove a workforce reduction. In Europe, the regulatory picture shifted in the opposite direction. In May, the European Parliament and Council reached a provisional agreement to delay the EU AI Act’s employment enforcement deadline [https://www.fisherphillips.com/en/insights/insights/eu-overhauls-ai-act-just-before-key-deadline] by 16 months, moving it from August 2, 2026 to December 2, 2027. The rules being delayed cover AI systems used in hiring, performance evaluation, worker monitoring, promotion, and termination decisions. Employers using those systems in Europe now have more time to comply. Workers in those same workplaces have 16 more months without the protections those rules would have provided. The international dimension of this story reaches further than European regulatory calendars. A Harvard Business Review analysis published June 5 [https://www.365outsource.com/virtual-assistance/ai-powered-assistants-philippine-outsourcing/] argues that generative AI is dismantling the labor-cost arbitrage that built the global outsourcing industry. The AI/Labor Report is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. The Philippines employs 2 million people in business process outsourcing and generates $40 billion annually from it. India’s sector employs 6 million and contributes 7% of GDP. Industry analysts project 2 to 3 million workers across both countries face disruption by 2030 [https://news.outsourceaccelerator.com/ai-threats-bpo-india-philippines/]. That means roughly 1 million BPO and IT jobs at direct risk in India. Oracle already cut 12,000 jobs in India in April as it redirected spending toward AI infrastructure. The layoff mechanism operating in Manila and Bengaluru is the same one operating in Uber’s People and Places division. The work that once required a human in a lower-cost location now requires a software subscription. The geography of the cost savings has changed, but the math facing workers has not. 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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