AI, cost cutting drive layoffs to recession-like levels: Report


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Summary

AI’s role

A new report found that U.S. employers slashed more than 150,000 jobs, partly because of AI implementation.

Warning sign

The firm that compiled the report said the findings may indicate a softening labor market.

Pushback

Labor market watchers have pushed back against the findings, arguing the company has a poor track record in predicting future labor market conditions.


Full story

U.S. employers eliminated 153,074 jobs In October, up 175% from the same month last year, as layoffs rose to recession-like levels, according to a new report. Challenger, Gray & Christmas, an outplacement and executive coaching company, said the layoffs were the most in any October in more than two decades.

Cost cutting and the rise of artificial intelligence were largely to blame, according to the firm.

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Technology companies were among those who slashed the most jobs, followed by retail and service companies. The report follows recent layoffs by Amazon, UPS, Microsoft and other corporations implementing more AI in day-to-day operations.

“Some industries are correcting after the hiring boom of the pandemic, but this comes as AI adoption, softening consumer demand and corporate spending, and rising costs drive belt-tightening and hiring freezes,” Andy Challenger, the chief revenue officer for Challenger, Gray & Christmas, said in a statement. “Those laid off now are finding it harder to quickly secure new roles, which could further loosen the labor market.”

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New report reveals job cuts in October 2025 reached their highest level in more than two decades.

A significant rise in layoffs

The October job losses of more than 150,000 compared with 55,597 in October 2024. So far this year, more than 1 million jobs have been eliminated — 65% more than in the first 10 months of 2024.

Challenger, Gray & Christmas attributed much of the reduction to the “DOGE impact,” defined by mass layoffs of federal workers and significant cuts to federal funding for private and nonprofit institutions.

Layoffs have now soared to their highest levels since 2020, when 2 million people had lost their jobs through October amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Additionally, the report found that 2025 is the worst year for announced job cuts since 2009, during the Great Recession.

Concerning numbers

Challenger said the findings are especially concerning, given that mass layoffs aren’t traditionally seen in the fourth quarter.

“At a time when job creation is at its lowest point in years, the optics of announcing layoffs in the fourth quarter is particularly unfavorable,” Challenger said.

With official job data unavailable because of the federal government shutdown, financial analysts are focusing more on numbers from private firms to better understand the state of the labor market.

Pushback against report

According to USA Today, labor market observers such as Vanguard have largely dismissed the report, accusing Challenger of being a traditionally “poor predictor of future labor market conditions.”

“But against the backdrop of a low-hire labor market, this bout of corporate job-cutting does represent a bigger labor risk than the 2022 tech layoffs when these workers were quickly scooped up by other industries,” a Vanguard spokesperson said in a statement. “However, we ultimately expect that persistent labor supply constraints over the next three years will help offset the unemployment impact of cyclical and technological pressures.”

Alan Judd (Content Editor) and Lawrence Banton (Digital Producer) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The large surge in job cuts across the United States in October reflects economic pressures including cost cutting, the adoption of artificial intelligence, and reductions in federal funding, raising concerns about labor market stability.

Rising layoffs

Challenger, Gray & Christmas reports that job cuts in October reached their highest level in more than twenty years, signaling possible stress in the labor market and a shift in employment patterns.

Economic uncertainty

Layoffs in multiple sectors and concerns about job creation indicate broader economic uncertainty and potential challenges for workers seeking new employment.

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Synthesized coverage insights across 48 media outlets

Debunking

According to labor market watchers cited by USA TODAY, the Challenger report’s announced layoffs do not always directly translate to actual job losses or future unemployment rates and have been historically a poor predictor of long-term labor market conditions.

Do the math

Job cuts in October: 153,074 (up 175% from October 2024). Year-to-date layoffs: 1,099,500 (65% higher than the same period a year ago). Hiring plans for 2025: just 488,077, down 35% from 2024 and at their lowest since 2011.

History lesson

Previous surges in layoffs of similar magnitude have occurred during recessions or major technological disruptions, such as in 2003 with cellphone adoption and 2020 with the pandemic shutdown, both leading to significant workforce restructuring.

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Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame the October layoff surge of 153,074 jobs, a 22-year high, with emotional terms like "worst October" and "Really Hurting," explicitly linking it to 'Trump Recession Fears' and 'recession-like levels'.
  • Media outlets in the center provide detailed figures, such as a 183% surge from September, and broader context including hiring slowdowns and 'cuts to government spending', offering a more nuanced view with contrasting job growth data.
  • Media outlets on the right highlight the "Surge" since 2003, focusing on market dynamics and a pessimistic outlook with phrases like "shifting toward more firings," while de-emphasizing political blame.

Media landscape

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48 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • In October, U.S.-based companies announced over 153,000 job cuts, the highest for the month in over 20 years, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
  • Nearly 1.1 million jobs have been eliminated this year, the most since 2020, as stated by Challenger.
  • ADP reported that only 42,000 jobs were added in October, indicating potential issues in the leisure and hospitality sectors.
  • Amazon, IBM, UPS and other major companies announced significant job cuts, reflecting broader labor market challenges.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Thursday, U.S.-based employers announced 153,074 job cuts in October, the largest October total since 2003 and a 183% surge from September, with nearly 450 companies disclosing layoff plans.
  • Cost-Cutting was the top reason for October layoffs, with artificial intelligence as a secondary driver, while overcapacity and tech-driven efficiencies prompted staffing recalibrations, Andy Challenger said.
  • Technology firms led private-sector cuts, with the technology sector reporting 33,281 cuts, and warehousing and tech together made up just over half of October's job losses.
  • Challenger warned the October surge signals potential labor market trouble as laid-off workers face harder job searches, while Federal Reserve officials express concern about a softening labor market.
  • Year-to-Date layoffs total about 1.1 million, up 65% this year, and Challenger warned fourth-quarter cuts have poor optics: "At a time when job creation is at its lowest point in years, the optics of announcing layoffs in the fourth quarter are particularly unfavorable."

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