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Is Big Tech’s $725B AI splurge being funded by mass layoffs?

by May 4, 2026
written by May 4, 2026

A widely reported figure this past week is that 81,747 tech workers lost their jobs in Q1 2026, the highest quarterly layoff figure the industry has seen in at least two years.

This has sparked the debate once again about large tech firms, AI and layoffs.

But most of those opinions are missing the actual story, because what’s happening right now in the tech labour market is not a crisis but a transaction.

A cold, deliberate, historically unprecedented one.

The 81,747 number is already outdated

The reality is that most reported figures track announced cuts at named companies, which does not provide a complete picture.

Other trackers put the 2026 figure at 95,878 workers impacted across 249 events as of early May, running at 864 people per day. A third tracker had already logged over 113,000 by the same point.

However, none of these figures captures stealth attrition, contractor eliminations, or the quiet hiring freezes that reduce headcount without triggering any announcement.

By mid-April, before Meta and Microsoft even fully executed their cuts, one tracker counted over 150,000 tech jobs eliminated in 2026 alone — making this the largest concentrated wave of tech workforce displacement in a decade.

Most profits, most job cuts

This is what makes the 2026 cycle structurally different from the post-pandemic correction of 2022 and 2023.

That wave was driven by overhiring reversals and rising rates, forcing discipline on growth-at-all-costs business models. What’s happening now involves different protagonists.

Amazon cut approximately 16,000 corporate roles in Q1, more than half of all tech layoffs in the quarter, while reporting AWS growth of 24% — its fastest in 13 quarters.

Oracle eliminated up to 30,000 positions, roughly 20% of its global workforce, targeting legacy database administrators and on-premises support teams.

Meta announced 8,000 cuts, 10% of its workforce, effective May 20 — with recruiting and HR absorbing cuts of 35 to 40%.

Salesforce’s Marc Benioff put it simply when announcing 4,000 customer support eliminations: “I need less heads.”

Microsoft offered voluntary retirement to 8,750 US employees, around 7% of its domestic workforce.

All of these look like deliberate choices.

The $725 billion arithmetic

The choice becomes legible when you look at the other side of the balance sheet. Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta collectively plan to spend $725 billion on capital expenditures in 2026, up 77% from last year’s already-record $410 billion.

Microsoft’s calendar-year 2026 capex sits at $190 billion.

Amazon committed $200 billion.

Meta raised its full-year guidance to between $125 billion and $145 billion, which implies spending roughly $370 million per day on data centre construction.

These four companies are now committing more capital to AI infrastructure than the entire global oil and gas industry spends on exploration.

The math inside each company is based on the fact that human salaries are the only cost flexible enough to be cut fast enough to partially offset that build-out.

Is AI actually responsible, or is it a convenient story?

This is the most important question in the data, and the answer is genuinely complicated. Nikkei Asia attributed 47.9% of Q1 tech layoffs to AI and automation.

An earlier analysis from RationalFX put the explicit AI-attribution figure at 20.4% for the same period.

The gap between those two numbers grew because companies escalated their AI-framing of cuts as the quarter progressed, not because the underlying cause changed.

OpenAI’s Sam Altman acknowledged the dynamic directly: “There’s some AI washing where people are blaming AI for layoffs that they would otherwise do.”

Cognizant’s Chief AI Officer added that it will take another six months to a year before companies start seeing real productivity gains from AI, suggesting many of the current cuts are running ahead of the actual automation.

The honest answer is that AI is real, the overhiring correction is real, and the rising cost of capital from the post-zero-rate era is equally real. Companies are choosing the most convenient narrative to package all three.

A labour market is splitting down the middle

The metric that gets the least attention, alongside the layoff numbers, is the one that shows 275,000 AI-related job postings were sitting open in the United States at the same time as Q1’s record cuts.

Companies report a 92% increase in hiring for AI-related positions in 2026, with a 56% wage premium attached to high-demand roles.

The problem is that the workers being laid off are largely not the workers being hired.

Customer support, quality assurance, content moderation, and middle management roles are being eliminated.

Machine learning engineers, AI safety researchers, and data infrastructure specialists are in shortage.

Bloomberg data suggests roughly half of AI-attributed layoffs will result in the same roles being rehired offshore or at lower salaries, which is a labour repricing story, not purely a labour reduction story.

Senior engineers who lost jobs at Salesforce, Intel, and Workday are searching at the highest rates since the 2022 wave, with median time-to-hire in the Bay Area stretching from 38 days in Q3 2025 to 67 days in Q1 2026.

Q2 has not yet been counted.

Meta’s 8,000 cuts land May 20.

Microsoft’s buyouts are still settling. Oracle’s full restructuring is ongoing.

The number will go up before it reverses, and the real question is whether the AI jobs being created will ever absorb, at comparable wages, the volume of roles being permanently retired.

The post Is Big Tech’s $725B AI splurge being funded by mass layoffs? appeared first on Invezz

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