By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
logo logo
  • Finance
  • Funding
  • Fintech
  • Wealth Management
  • Corporate Finance
  • Banking
  • Financial Crime
  • Commodities
  • Economy and Policy
  • More
    • International Markets
    • Real Estate
    • Regulations and Compliance
    • Startups and Innovation
    • Sustainable Finance
    • Swiss-German
    • Support Links
  • Press Releases
Reading: Are Dorsey’s giant job cuts the start of an AI jobs apocalypse? Economists weigh in
Swiss Finance NewsSwiss Finance News
Aa
Search
  • Finance
  • Funding
  • Fintech
  • Wealth Management
  • Corporate Finance
  • Banking
  • Financial Crime
  • Commodities
  • Economy and Policy
  • More
    • International Markets
    • Real Estate
    • Regulations and Compliance
    • Startups and Innovation
    • Sustainable Finance
    • Swiss-German
    • Support Links
  • Press Releases
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Swiss Finance News > News > Economy and Policy > Are Dorsey’s giant job cuts the start of an AI jobs apocalypse? Economists weigh in
Economy and Policy

Are Dorsey’s giant job cuts the start of an AI jobs apocalypse? Economists weigh in

gelikuwa
Last updated: 2026/02/28 at 8:10 AM
By gelikuwa 5 Min Read
Share
SHARE
swiss

Block CEO Jack Dorsey’s move to cut nearly half the company’s workforce is shining a spotlight on a growing question for corporate America: whether advances in artificial intelligence will ultimately mean fewer workers.

Contents
Doubts about jobsAI’s broad impactDON’T MISS ANY NEWS

In an earnings call Thursday, Dorsey said Block will cut about 4,000 jobs.

Dorsey framed the move as more than a cost-cutting exercise, instead describing a shift in how companies operate as artificial intelligence becomes more central to business decisions.

He also suggested other companies will follow suit.

reputation

“I don’t think we’re early to this realization. I think most companies are late,” he said. “Within the next year, I believe the majority of companies will reach the same conclusion and make similar structural changes. I’d rather get there honestly and on our own terms than be forced into it reactively.”

Economists, however, question whether such moves signal a broader shift in the labor market or simply reflect company-specific adjustments.

“This is a function of lax judgment during a period of rapid expansion and the retrenchment that follows,” said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM. “It should be understood within the unique context of that firm, and it does not signal risk to the broader U.S. labor market.”

Doubts about jobs

The layoffs come amid broader questions about the employment picture.

Truth

Though job cuts have remained low and the unemployment rate is a relatively healthy 4.3%, openings have contracted sharply and hiring in 2025 largely flatlined, with average payroll growth of just 15,000.

Still, the tech-related picture looks relatively healthy.

The information sector, one proxy for the tech industry, saw its unemployment rate fall to 5% in January, down 0.7 percentage point from a year ago. Job openings have declined in the sector, but demand for some roles remains firm: Postings in software development are up 12% from a year ago, according to Indeed.

Most economists remain sanguine on the labor market, even in the current “low-hire, low-fire” environment.

Claudia Sahm, chief economist at New Century Advisors, said Friday on CNBC that while it is “healthy” to discuss AI’s potential impact, it is important not to overinterpret individual company decisions.

“I would not extrapolate from Block to the whole U.S. economy,” Sahm said. “It’s important to understand that these AI tools — the direction you go with them really depends on the leadership. Automation, mass layoffs is not necessarily the only path forward.”

AI’s broad impact

A widely-discussed speech earlier this week by Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller also underscored the challenges and opportunities AI presents.

While discussing the Fed’s internal use of the technology, Waller said AI is more likely to enhance productivity than eliminate jobs outright.

“When ATMs were first introduced, they didn’t eliminate bank tellers. Instead, they changed how banking worked,” he said. “The real impact wasn’t automation alone — it was how institutions reorganized around technology. AI is similar. The biggest gains won’t come from simply adding AI to existing processes. They’ll come from rethinking workflows, roles and systems.”

But even if layoffs are not yet widespread — and Dorsey’s warnings are not necessarily a broad harbinger — companies are beginning to rethink how they allocate resources.

Tech jobs account for only about 5% to 7% of the total labor force, but AI technology itself is spreading far beyond the sector.

“Some jobs are apt to be disrupted by AI” as companies reconsider the balance between labor and technology, said Laura Ullrich, director of economic research for North America at Indeed Hiring Lab.

“Companies are really shifting their investments toward capital spending and away from labor,” Ullrich added. “They’re investing in AI with the hope that it can replace jobs.”

Source link

DON’T MISS ANY NEWS

Get all the latest news straight to your inbox

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

You’ve been successfully subscribed to our newsletter!

investigation

You Might Also Like

As Gas Tops $4 Per Gallon, Congress Considers Lowering The Gas Tax

Here are all the ways the Iran war has affected the U.S. economy so far

Markets betting on stablecoin disruption, say IMF economists

EU-US relations ‘broken in a deep way’ by Trump 2.0 – Blanchard

Orban And Putin Will Work To Sabotage Magyar’s Victory In Hungary Elections

TAGGED: apocalypse, Cuts, Dorseys, economists, giant, job, Jobs, Start, weigh
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Weather
Your API key is not activated yet. Within the next couple of hours, it will be activated and ready to use.
Or
Invalid API key. Please see http://openweathermap.org/faq#error401 for more info.
Weather from OpenWeatherMap

You Might Also Like

As Gas Tops $4 Per Gallon, Congress Considers Lowering The Gas Tax

By gelikuwa 0 Min Read
Economy and Policy

Here are all the ways the Iran war has affected the U.S. economy so far

By gelikuwa 11 Min Read
Fintech

Markets betting on stablecoin disruption, say IMF economists

By gelikuwa 0 Min Read
- Advertisement -
Ad image

Popular Articles

Commodities

Canadian Stocks Edge Higher As Optimism Rises Ahead Of U.S.-Iran Peace Talks

(RTTNews) - Canadian stocks inched higher on Friday, with expectations of an end to the gulf…

11 April 2026
Finance

Middle East: Key Trends Shaping 2026

The Iran war is undermining economic optimism across the Gulf and wider MENA. Do governments have…

11 April 2026
Finance

Going Deeper: Trade Finance In Asia

Trade finance is booming across Asia. But SMEs and micro enterprises still struggle for attention, and…

11 April 2026
Finance

The Push for Transparency in Cross-Border Payments

Over the past few years, the financial sector judged cross-border payments on two simple metrics: speed and…

12 April 2026

About Us

Swiss Finance News delivers the latest updates and insights on the dynamic world of finance in Switzerland. Stay informed with comprehensive coverage of Fiance, Banking, Investments and market trends.  From regulatory developments to innovative fintech solutions, Swiss Finance News is your go-to source for staying ahead in the competitive realm of Swiss finance.

Categories

  • Real Estate
  • Regulations and Compliance
  • Startups and Innovation
  • Sustainable Finance
  • Wealth Management

Quick Links

  • Contact
  • Support Links
  • Impressum
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2023 Swissfinancenews.ch – All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?