The AI/Labor Report
On June 4, Amazon gathered journalists at a fulfillment center near London to introduce the next generation of its Proteus warehouse robot [https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318088/20260609/amazon-unveils-conversational-proteus-warehouse-robot-10b-europe-push.htm]. The new model can roam freely across an entire facility and take instructions in plain conversational language. Workers tell it what it needs to do. It figures out the route, the timing, and the priority on its own. Amazon also announced a plan to invest more than €10 billion modernizing its European fulfillment network and add 25,000 jobs across the continent. At roughly the same time, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy sent a memo to staff [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/05/amazon-robot-proteus-warehouse-ai-layoffs.html] acknowledging that AI will reduce the company’s total corporate workforce over the coming years. “We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today,” he wrote. Listen on Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-ai-labor-report/id1896663061] Amazon has eliminated tens of thousands of corporate positions since late 2025. The London event was a showcase for the physical side of that same process. Robots that understand plain language do not need specialized software operators. The work of directing them moves from a trained technician to anyone on the floor, and then, eventually, to no one in particular. The workforce consequences of this pattern are already visible in India, where Amazon cut 12,000 jobs in April as it redirected spending toward AI infrastructure. India’s technology job market hit a 28-month low in June [https://analyticsindiamag.com/ai-news/india-tech-hiring-hits-28-month-low-as-active-job-demand-falls-17-yoy/], with only 93,000 active openings recorded, down 14% from May and 17% from a year earlier. IT services, the sector that built India’s modern middle class, saw openings fall 31% year over year. Entry-level positions for workers with up to two years of experience dropped to 10,000 openings [https://www.outlookbusiness.com/corporate/india-incs-fresher-hiring-sees-steep-drop-amid-ai-adoption], a 44% annual decline. EY India’s technology sector leader summed up the shift plainly: revenue growth is now decoupled from headcount growth. Indian IT firms are expanding output without expanding staff. The same dynamic runs through Southeast Asia, where it lands on workers with far fewer protections. A McKinsey survey [https://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2026/05/25/gig-economy-worker/5161779758231/] found that about two-thirds of major Southeast Asian companies have already fully adopted AI or are actively expanding its deployment. At the Semicon Southeast Asia 2026 conference in Kuala Lumpur, industry leaders described the automation trend as permanent. “There is no going back,” one speaker said. An estimated 40 million gig workers across the region face direct exposure to these shifts. A World Bank report urged governments to expand AI job training and strengthen support for displaced workers, while noting that many countries in the region still lack basic AI skills education in their school systems. Japan faces the same technology at the opposite end of the demographic spectrum. Japan has an estimated 1.3 million unfilled technology positions and a labor shortage [https://siliconcanals.com/sc-w-japan-is-deploying-robots-not-to-replace-workers-but-because-theres-no-one-left-to-hire/] so severe that companies are deploying robots primarily because there are not enough humans available to hire. A Reuters/Nikkei survey confirmed that labor shortages, not cost-cutting, are the primary force pushing Japanese firms toward AI and robotics adoption. Toyota, Mitsubishi Electric, and Honda are scaling physical AI systems as a workforce substitute rather than a workforce reduction. Japan is the only major economy in which AI deployment functions as a solution to a labor shortage rather than a cause of one. In Africa, the problem runs in yet another direction. At the 2026 Future of Jobs Summit [https://news.sap.com/africa/2026/05/2026-future-of-jobs-summit-why-sas-future-workforce-must-adapt-faster-to-survive-the-ai-revolution/]in Sandton, South African business leaders and policymakers described an urgent collision between a worsening unemployment crisis and accelerating AI adoption. Youth unemployment among South Africans aged 15 to 34 stands at 45.8%. The jobs that AI is beginning to reach in South Africa never fully materialized for young workers there in the first place. A report published in Ghana this week [https://www.modernghana.com/news/1498226/africa-is-not-losing-jobs-to-ai-it-is-losing.amp] argues that Africa’s real AI labor risk is not mass displacement but a failure to build skills fast enough. Youth unemployment among Ghanaians aged 15 to 35 already stands near 21%. 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 World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025 [https://www.weforum.org/press/2025/01/future-of-jobs-report-2025-78-million-new-job-opportunities-by-2030-but-urgent-upskilling-needed-to-prepare-workforces/] projects that automation will displace 92 million jobs globally by 2030 while creating 170 million new roles. Those new roles, however, require advanced digital proficiency that most African workers currently have no path to acquire. The UN Economic Commission for Africa [https://www.uneca.org/stories/ai-and-jobs-in-africa-turning-disruption-into-opportunity] convened more than 200 participants earlier this year to examine whether AI will drive job creation or labor market disruption across the continent. The participants agreed that the benefits will not arrive automatically or reach workers evenly. In Europe, a new layer of worker-facing regulation took effect this week with almost no fanfare. The European Commission published a Code of Practice [https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/regulatory-framework-ai] on marking and labelling AI-generated content on June 10. The Code directly affects content workers, journalists, and media professionals operating in EU markets. The week’s stories span four continents and describe four distinct versions of the same pressure: too many robots arriving too fast in some places, not enough workers available in others, and almost nowhere a legal structure prepared to manage either outcome. BUY NOW! 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