Facebook owner Meta's announcement on Tuesday that it will shed 10,000 jobs over the next few months is the latest in a series of mass layoffs in the once-unassailable tech sector, which is facing a huge downturn.
The cuts in the company that also owns Instagram and WhatsApp, follow a cull of 11,000 jobs announced in November.
Here are the others:
- Amazon -
The online retail giant said on January 5, 2023 it would cut more than 18,000 jobs, citing "the uncertain economy" and the fact it had "hired rapidly" during the Covid pandemic.
During Covid, Amazon had gone on a hiring spree to meet an explosion in demand for deliveries, doubling its global staff between the beginning of 2020 and start of 2022.
At the end of September, the group had 1.54 million employees worldwide.
- Google -
On January 20, Google's parent company Alphabet announced about 12,000 job cuts globally, citing a changing "economic reality".
"Over the past two years we've seen periods of dramatic growth. To match and fuel that growth, we hired for a different economic reality than the one we face today," CEO Sundar Pichai said in an email to employees.
Alphabet employed nearly 187,000 workers worldwide at the end of September 2022. The cuts represent a little over six percent of its total workforce.
- Microsoft -
On January 18, Microsoft announced it would lay off 10,000 employees in the coming months.
The cuts were "in response to macroeconomic conditions and changing customer priorities," the maker of the Windows operating system said in a US regulatory filing.
The plan followed two smaller rounds of layoffs in 2022, one in July affecting less than one percent of the workforce and a second in October targeting under 1,000 people.
- Twitter -
Just a week after his
Read more on tech.hindustantimes.com