Amazon cuts 14,000 corporate jobs
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US Fed cuts rate by another 25bps
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Layoffs are piling up, raising worker anxiety. Here are some companies that have cut jobs recently
It's a tough time for the job market. Amid wider economic uncertainty, some analysts have said that businesses are at a “no-hire, no fire” standstill.
1don MSN
"No hire, no fire" job market may no longer be a thing as big companies announce mass layoffs
Amazon and UPS on Tuesday announced tens of thousands of job cuts, the latest signal that the U.S. labor market is downshifting.
City of London veteran Quentin Nason says Gen Z should "think big" and turn to entrepreneurship as AI and automation shrink entry-level career paths.
German sportswear maker Puma on Wednesday said it would cut a further 13% of its workforce globally, equivalent to 900 jobs, by the end of 2026, as its sales continued to decline.
It combines the art of storytelling and human connection with the science of data and processes, using both sides of the brain to drive results.
The move comes amid similar cuts at Meta and Applied Materials, signaling a broader tech industry shift toward automation and AI investment.
The Keystone state ranks among the worst in the country for jobs, according to WalletHub, a personal finance firm. Pennsylvania ranked 44th overall, with just North Carolina, Oregon, Alaska, Kentucky, Louisiana, and West Virginia getting worse marks. New Jersey ranked 17th overall.
Amazon said it would cut around 14,000 jobs from its white-collar workforce. The news made it the latest corporate giant to do so—and one of several big tech companies that are paring back at a time when business is strong.