Corporate America’s Layoff Bloodbath: The Receipts

The Numbers Continue to Rise

Let’s drop the euphemisms and PR spin. This isn’t “right-sizing.” This isn’t “strategic realignment.” This is a full-blown corporate bloodletting, carried out while executives collect bonuses, issue AI press releases, and assure investors everything is “on track.”

Below is the hard list they don’t want you to see all in one place. These are not rumors. These are not projections. These are major layoffs already executed, justified with buzzwords, while tens of thousands of workers are shown the door. And the totals continue to rise.

  • UPS: 48,000 employees laid off — 14,000 management and 34,000 operations

  • Intel: 24,000+ employees laid off

  • Nestlé: 16,000 employees laid off

  • Microsoft: ~15,000 employees laid off

  • Amazon: ~14,000 employees laid off

  • Robert Bosch: 13,000 employees laid off

  • Verizon: 13,000+ employees laid off

  • Tata Consultancy Services (TCS): 12,000+ employees laid off

  • Dell Technologies: 12,000 employees laid off

  • Bayer: ~12,000 employees laid off

This isn’t a downturn — it’s a strategy. Fire humans, automate functions, pad margins, repeat. The workforce is treated like a line item to be erased, not a backbone to be protected. And the most infuriating part? These cuts are sold as “necessary,” even as many of these same companies post profits, expand executive compensation, and pump out optimistic forecasts.

Change is constant, and it's coming. There will always be a tomorrow, no matter how much you may try to ignore it. There are no guarantees in life, nor promises of a bright future. We see good people being laid off through no fault of their own. Just because something terrible hasn't happened yet doesn't mean it won't. It can happen to anyone, at any time, anywhere. No one is guaranteed to wake up tomorrow and still have a job by evening. While many employees can read the writing on the wall, why do most assume it’s targeted at someone else? Are you now wondering, Am I Next?