8,000 Meta workers wake up jobless; Bezos calls AI a bulldozer, not a threat; Pew says workers unimpressed with AI; Upwork fires humans; pharma layoffs soar; fewest S&P jobs since 2016
In Today’s News
Meta Fired 8,000 People Yesterday, From 4am Onward
Amazon’s Jeff Bezos Tries To Sell The Wonders Of AI
Pew Research Says Most Americans Dislike The Idea Of AI
Upwork Cuts A Quarter Of Its Human Labor
S&P 500 Employed Fewer Staff In 2025 Than In 2016
Pharma On A Layoff Spree
Meta Layoffs
Yesterday morning, Meta began executing the largest single-day workforce reduction in its history [https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2026/5/20/meta-cuts-8000-jobs-in-sweeping-global-layoffs]. Notifications went out at 4 a.m. local time, rolling across time zones from Singapore to Europe to the United States. By the end of the day, 8,000 people had lost their jobs, 6,000 open positions had been cancelled, and 7,000 remaining workers had been redirected into newly created AI-focused units.
The specific teams cut first tell you something about the company’s strategy going forward. Workers on Meta’s integrity team, the group responsible for removing hate speech and malicious content, were among the first to go [https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2026/5/20/meta-cuts-8000-jobs-in-sweeping-global-layoffs]. So were members of the cybersecurity team and the content design division. Meta had already moved in March to replace third-party contractors handling content moderation with AI systems.
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The May 20 layoffs formalized what the March contractor transition had already begun. The workers who kept the platforms safe from manipulation are now the workers AI displaced first.
Zuckerberg’s memo to staff that morning read: “Success isn’t a given” in the AI era. [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/20/meta-layoffs-zuckerberg-says-success-isnt-a-given-in-memo.html] Meta’s CFO told investors during the Q1 earnings call that executives “don’t really know what the optimal size of the company will be in the future.” That admission came from a company in the middle of cutting 10 percent of its workforce and committing up to $145 billion in capital spending this year, most of it on AI infrastructure.
The total displacement at Meta since 2022 now stands at roughly 25,000 workers. More cuts are planned for the second half of 2026.
Jeff Bezos Went on CNBC the Same Morning
While Meta’s notifications were going out, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos appeared on CNBC’s Squawk Box [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/20/jeff-bezos-taxes-ai-corporations-trump.html] and told viewers that workers worried about AI displacement are “dead wrong.”
“If you’ve been digging out a basement for your house with a shovel and somebody’s about to hand you a bulldozer, you should be so happy,” [https://gizmodo.com/jeff-bezos-tells-workers-to-be-so-happy-theyre-being-given-the-gift-of-ai-2000761413] Bezos said. He predicted that AI will produce so much productivity and economic abundance that the real problem will be a labor shortage, not unemployment.
He added that housing will get cheaper, food will get cheaper, and that households with two earners will voluntarily see one person leave the workforce. Asked directly whether Amazon has laid off workers due to AI, Bezos said there have been no AI-related layoffs at the company [https://www.benzinga.com/markets/tech/26/05/52698076/jeff-bezos-says-ai-isnt-taking-all-the-jobs-theres-going-to-be-a-labor-shortage]. Amazon has cut at least 30,000 workers since October 2025.
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The timing of the interview and the layoffs was not coordinated. That makes it more instructive, not less. The same morning that thousands of workers learned by email that their jobs were gone, the founder of one of the largest employers in America described the situation as a gift.
Nevertheless, an October 2025 New York Times article cites that Amazon expects to sell roughly twice as many products by 2033, yet its internal robotics team aims to avoid hiring more than 600,000 U.S. workers who would otherwise be needed to handle that volume.
In other words, Amazon is describing jobs that will never be created, not jobs being eliminated from existing workers.
A Pew Research Center survey cited in coverage of the Bezos interview found that half of U.S. adults are more concerned than excited about AI [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/20/jeff-bezos-taxes-ai-corporations-trump.html]. Among employed workers specifically, 52 percent say they feel worried about the future impact of AI in the workplace, 33 percent feel overwhelmed, and 32 percent believe AI will lead to fewer job opportunities for them long-term [https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2025/02/25/workers-views-of-ai-use-in-the-workplace/]. The workers in that survey are not describing an abstract future. They are describing the labor market they are already in.
Upwork Cuts a Quarter of Its Workforce. Its Product Is Human Labor.
On May 7, Upwork CEO Hayden Brown announced the company would cut roughly 25 percent of its workforce [https://officechai.com/ai/upwork-lays-off-25-of-its-workforce-says-ai-will-lead-to-smaller-teams/], writing in a memo to employees: “Two pizza teams are dead. AI means smaller, differently resourced teams in product and engineering can make a bigger impact than ever.”
Upwork is a marketplace that exists to connect businesses with freelance human workers. The platform is now cutting its own human staff while routing more work through AI agents. The company’s stock fell 19 percent on the announcement. Upwork’s CEO framed the cuts as structural, not cyclical, built around the premise that AI permanently reduces the number of people needed to produce a given output.
Coinbase, PayPal, Cloudflare, Freshworks, and Block all announced similar double-digit cuts in the same two-week window [https://finance.yahoo.com/sectors/technology/articles/layoffs-accelerate-may-2026-firms-040430218.html], each citing AI efficiency as the primary driver. The pattern across the cohort is consistent: companies with flat-to-rising revenue are using AI as the stated reason for headcount reductions, not weak demand.
The S&P 500 Employed Fewer People in 2025 Than in 2016
The layoffs at Upwork, Meta, and the May cohort are not isolated decisions. S&P 500 total headcount fell in 2025 for the first time since 2016 [https://layoffhedge.com/company/upwork], with the combined workforce of America’s largest public companies dropping by roughly 400,000 workers and ending eight consecutive years of employment growth.
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The companies that define American corporate employment are collectively employing fewer people.
Despite a growing economy and record capital spending, humans are mere collateral to be shed.
The capital is going up into AI infrastructure. The headcount is going down.
Biopharma Layoffs Are Up 24 Percent Year Over Year
Biopharma companies cut 14,167 workers in the first four and a half months of 2026 [https://www.biospace.com/job-trends/takeda-cuts-send-layoffs-soaring-in-may-rising-year-over-year], up 24 percent from the same period in 2025. Takeda Pharmaceutical’s 4,500-person reduction drove much of the increase.
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The biopharma sector employs large numbers of administrative, operational, and support workers who have no particular reason to identify with the tech layoff narrative. They are in it anyway.
Fifty-two biopharma companies made cuts in the first four and a half months of 2026, compared to 114 in the same period of 2025 [https://www.biospace.com/job-trends/takeda-cuts-send-layoffs-soaring-in-may-rising-year-over-year]. Fewer companies are cutting, but each cut is larger. The layoff wave is consolidating into bigger, more deliberate restructurings, the kind that reflect strategic decisions rather than quarterly belt-tightening.
The picture across all of these stories is the same one the Bureau of Labor Statistics data confirmed last Friday. The headline economy looks stable. Underneath the headline, though, the sectors where most workers actually earn their living are contracting. The companies doing the contracting are reporting that this is the plan.
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