The ongoing series of layoffs reported across the US and Canada in 2024 and 2025 underscores a period of profound economic change, where companies are prioritizing efficiency, adapting to new tariffs, and reallocating resources towards AI, leading to widespread worker anxiety despite broader labor market resilience.
The job market in North America finds itself in a precarious state, marked by a paradox: a generally strong overall employment rate coexisting with a persistent wave of layoffs. As we navigate through 2024 and into 2025, companies across various sectors in the US and Canada have continued to trim their workforces, a trend deeply rooted in economic uncertainty, evolving corporate strategies, and the accelerating integration of artificial intelligence (AI).
This isn’t merely a series of isolated events but a broader recalibration, leaving many workers anxious about their long-term stability. The phenomenon, described by some analysts as a “no-hire, no fire” standstill, sees businesses limiting new hires to only a few specific roles, if not pausing openings entirely, while simultaneously announcing significant job reductions. This intricate dance reflects deep-seated shifts in global and domestic economies.
The Evolving Economic Landscape: Triggers for Job Cuts
The current wave of layoffs can be traced back to several interconnected factors, creating a challenging environment for businesses and employees alike. Understanding these triggers is crucial to grasping the full scope of the situation.
Pandemic-Era Expansion and Subsequent Correction
A significant portion of the tech industry’s current layoffs stems from an aggressive hiring spree during the COVID-19 pandemic. As remote work, online shopping, and digital social interactions surged, tech companies rapidly expanded to meet unprecedented consumer demand. This growth was further fueled by the Federal Reserve’s policy of slashing interest rates throughout 2021, making capital cheaper and encouraging investment in rapid expansion. However, as economic conditions normalized and interest rates began to climb in early 2022, this growth trend reversed, necessitating a workforce correction. Data from Layoffs.fyi indicates tech layoffs peaked in the first quarter of 2023 before gradually declining, yet still remaining substantial through 2024 and 2025.
Persistent Economic Uncertainty and Operational Costs
Beyond the tech bubble, broader economic uncertainty continues to be a primary driver for job cuts. Companies across all sectors cite concerns about economic conditions as a reason for reducing headcount. Rising operational costs, shifts in consumer spending patterns, and even political decisions like the imposition of new tariffs have squeezed profit margins, forcing companies to streamline operations. For instance, both Nestlé and Procter & Gamble have cited tariff pressures among reasons for their respective workforce reductions, as reported by the Associated Press.
The AI Revolution: Reshaping Workforces
Perhaps one of the most profound, albeit complex, drivers behind current layoffs is the rapid advancement and integration of artificial intelligence. While AI is creating new roles, it is also fundamentally altering existing job functions and, in many cases, leading to workforce reductions.
Companies like Amazon and Microsoft, while heavily investing in AI, have simultaneously announced significant layoffs. Amazon, for example, cut approximately 14,000 corporate jobs, with CEO Andy Jassy anticipating that generative AI would reduce the company’s corporate workforce in the coming years. This isn’t necessarily AI “taking jobs” directly, but rather, as Jason Schloetzer, a professor of business administration at Georgetown University’s McDonough School, suggests, AI’s “appetite for cash” is leading to trade-offs in employment in favor of infrastructure investment.
The shift towards digitalization and AI-driven efficiencies is also evident in traditional industries. Lufthansa Group announced plans to shed 4,000 jobs by 2030, explicitly citing the adoption of artificial intelligence and digitalization as key reasons for the reduction, particularly in administrative roles.
Who’s Cutting Jobs? A Sector-by-Sector Snapshot (2024-2025)
The impact of these trends has been widespread, affecting a diverse array of industries and company sizes. Here’s a detailed look at some of the major companies that have announced significant layoffs:
Technology
- Amazon: Cut less than 5% at Buy with Prime, 5% at Audible, several hundred in streaming/studio, 35% at Twitch, hundreds at AWS, and hundreds in physical stores tech team in 2024, followed by approximately 14,000 corporate jobs in 2025 as part of AI investment shifts.
- Cisco Systems: Laid off 7% of its global workforce in 2024, months after a prior 5% cut.
- Alphabet (Google): Dozens at X Lab, hundreds in advertising sales, hardware teams (Pixel, Nest, Fitbit), and a majority in augmented reality in 2024, with further hundreds in platforms and devices in 2025.
- Microsoft: Cut 1,900 jobs at Activision Blizzard and Xbox in 2024, followed by approximately 6,000 workers across its workforce and an additional 9,000 positions hitting Xbox and other divisions in 2025.
- Intel: Announced plans to cut more than 15% of its workforce (some 17,500 people) in 2024, aiming to end 2025 with 75,000 “core” workers.
- Salesforce: Laid off about 700 employees (1% of global workforce) in 2024.
- Snap: Cut around 528 jobs (10% of global workforce) in 2024.
Automakers
- Tesla: Laid off more than 10% of its global workforce in 2024 due to falling sales and intensifying EV price wars.
- Lucid: Reduced its workforce by 6% (around 400 employees) in 2024 amidst slower EV growth.
- General Motors: Laid off 200 workers at its EV plants in Detroit and Hamtramck in April 2025.
Media and Entertainment
- Paramount Global: Cut 15% of its US workforce (roughly 2,000 people) in 2024 as part of cost-cutting and merger efforts.
- Pixar Animation Studios: Laid off about 14% of its workforce (175 people) in 2024, scaling back original streaming series.
- Bell Canada: Planned to slash 4,800 jobs in 2024.
Financial Services
- Citigroup: Plans to reduce headcount by 20,000 people over two years, with 716 roles cut in New York in 2024.
- PayPal Holdings: Planned to cut about 2,500 jobs (9% of its global workforce) in 2024.
- Block Inc.: Started unspecified job cuts in 2024, with reports of 931 employees (8% of staff) cut in March 2025.
Consumer and Retail
- Walmart: Plans to cut hundreds of jobs at its corporate headquarters in 2024.
- Target: Eliminated about 1,800 corporate positions (8% of corporate workforce) in 2025 as part of streamlining efforts.
- Estee Lauder: Plans to cut 3% to 5% of its global workforce in 2024.
- Levi Strauss & Co: Planning to slash 10%-15% of global corporate jobs in 2024.
- Nike: Cut about 2% of its total workforce (more than 1,600 jobs) in 2024.
Manufacturing and Logistics
- United Parcel Service (UPS): Disclosed about 48,000 job cuts in 2025 as part of turnaround efforts and shifts in shipping outputs, much higher than earlier forecasts.
- Lockheed Martin: Planned to cut 1% of its jobs in 2024.
- FedEx: Planning to cut between 1,700 and 2,000 back-office jobs in Europe in 2024.
This extensive list, compiled from Reuters and Associated Press reports, underscores the broad nature of the current economic restructuring.
Worker Anxiety and the Path Forward
Despite the overall unemployment rate hovering between 3.4% and 4.2% from late 2021 to early 2025, the highly visible layoffs in prominent sectors like technology and retail have fueled significant worker anxiety. This sentiment is compounded by concerns over federal job cuts and government shutdowns, which add another layer of uncertainty for public sector employees.
The widespread nature of these layoffs, affecting everyone from entry-level staff to seasoned management, suggests a fundamental re-evaluation of business models and workforce needs. Companies are prioritizing efficiency, adapting to new technological paradigms, and navigating a complex global economic environment. For employees, this period demands adaptability, continuous skill development, and a keen awareness of market trends.
As the job market continues to evolve, the balance between human labor and technological advancement, coupled with fluctuating economic conditions, will undoubtedly shape the future of employment in North America.