The AI/Labor Report
The government published two labor market readings this week, and they tell the same contradictory story they have been telling all year. The BLS JOLTS report released Tuesday [https://www.bls.gov/news.release/jolts.nr0.htm] showed 7.6 million job openings in April, a jump of 730,000 from March. Hiring fell to 5.1 million, and the hiring rate dropped to 3.2%. Companies are posting positions they are filling more slowly, more selectively, or in some cases simply not filling at all. Analysts described the pattern as a continuation of what has defined 2026: low-hire, low-fire. Job openings at their lowest since 2020. Actual hiring well below that floor. The headline number looks healthy. The behavior behind it does not. Listen on Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-ai-labor-report/id1896663061] The Construction Offset Is Temporary Goldman Sachs released its latest AI Adoption Tracker on June 1 [https://fortune.com/2026/06/01/how-many-jobs-is-ai-destroying-goldman-sachs-11000-per-month-gen-z-economy/], and it produced a number that sounds like good news: the net monthly job loss attributed to AI fell from 16,000 to 11,000. The reason is AI-adjacent infrastructure. Data center construction added roughly 9,000 jobs per month and 212,000 positions since 2022. Strip out those construction jobs, and the picture in marketing, customer service, graphic design, software development, and document processing looks worse than the headline implies. April set a single-month record: 21,900 corporate layoffs explicitly attributed to AI, the highest Goldman has recorded since it began tracking in 2023. Total AI-attributed layoffs over three years now stand at 136,000. One in four Russell 3000 companies mentioned AI and labor together on Q1 2026 earnings calls. Construction jobs building data centers are real jobs. They also belong to a different workforce than the office workers those data centers are replacing, and the construction phase will end. 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. India and the Philippines Are Running the Same Labor Experiment India’s top five IT firms added just [https://www.computerworld.com/article/4119064/ai-boom-hiring-bust-indian-it-firms-add-just-17-net-employees-in-nine-months.html]17 [https://www.computerworld.com/article/4119064/ai-boom-hiring-bust-indian-it-firms-add-just-17-net-employees-in-nine-months.html] net employees [https://www.computerworld.com/article/4119064/ai-boom-hiring-bust-indian-it-firms-add-just-17-net-employees-in-nine-months.html] in the first nine months of fiscal 2026. TCS cut 12,000 workers in its largest reduction ever. Oracle cut 12,000 India-based positions in April alone. Bernstein sent an open letter to Prime Minister Modi [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/04/30/ai-threat-indias-growth-story-jobs.html] warning that AI threatens the high-wage IT jobs that underpin India’s real estate, education, and services economy. A junior coder in Bengaluru named Ravi, who had been named “star performer of the year,” received his layoff notice by email. The email cited AI directly. The Philippines’ 2-million-worker BPO sector generates $40 billion annually and employs a workforce whose primary competitive advantage is English fluency. AI-powered voice and translation tools now erode that advantage directly [https://news.outsourceaccelerator.com/ai-threatens-bpo-india-philippines/]. India and the Philippines together represent the largest offshore delivery infrastructure on earth. The displacement happening there is the same displacement hitting American white-collar workers, running two time zones ahead. 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. IBM Pledged 5 Million Retraining Slots. The Gap Is 1.4 Billion. IBM announced a commitment to train 5 million Indian workers on AI skills [https://news.outsourceaccelerator.com/india-must-reskill-millions/], co-signed with the Indian government following the India AI Impact Summit. India’s national planning commission published a scenario showing that without corrective action, India’s tech headcount drops from 7.5 to 8 million workers today to 6 million by 2031. With aggressive reskilling, it could reach 10 million. IBM’s program is the largest private-sector reskilling commitment in India tied to an active government partnership anywhere in the world right now. Its scale also illustrates the scope of the problem it addresses. Only 58 million Indian workers completed any AI training in 2025 [https://startuptalky.com/ai-in-hr-india-future-of-jobs-reskilling-gap-78-million-jobs/], against an estimated 1.4 billion who need it by 2028. IBM’s 5 million slots represent 0.35% of that gap. The AI/Labor Report is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Japan’s Numbers Explain the Future Japan maintained 2.5% unemployment through 2025 while recording six consecutive months of real wage declines. It seems productivity gains from AI are flowing to employers, not workers. Meanwhile, South Korea’s workers aged 25 to 29 fell by 98,000 in a single quarter [https://www.weforum.org/stories/2025/04/ai-jobs-international-workers-day/], the steepest youth employment drop in 12 years.Recall the United States is also seeing a rapidly rising unemployment rate for young, college-educated job seekers. The Anxiety Is Measurable Now Mercer’s Global Talent Trends 2026 report [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/20/ai-impacting-labor-market-like-a-tsunami-as-layoff-fears-mount.html] surveyed 12,000 workers worldwide. The survey found that the share worried about AI-related job loss jumped from 28% in 2024 to 40% in 2026. Sixty-two percent said their leaders underestimate AI’s emotional and psychological impact. The anxiety is accurate. It also goes unaddressed in most corporate communications about AI strategy. And finally, Colorado’s AI Act takes effect June 30 [https://www.techtimes.com/articles/317392/20260529/tech-layoffs-reach-142000-2026-profitable-companies-cut-jobs-fund-700b-ai-infrastructure.htm]. The policy requires bias controls for AI used in employment decisions. Also, Connecticut’s notification law for employers laying off workers for AI-related reasons takes effect in October. California is 180 days into its executive order for a review of AI’s impact on the workplace and worker protections. Three state deadlines are converging in the next five months. The Feds are still asleep at the wheel. 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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