The number of tech sector layoffs in 2024 has been outpacing the number of terminations in 2023.
Why widespread tech layoffs keep happening despite a strong U.S. economy::The number of tech sector layoffs in 2024 has been outpacing the number of terminations in 2023.
There’s also the stock market effect. Companies that conducted layoffs haven’t been punished, either by investors or on their bottom lines. In fact, they’ve been rewarded with rising stock prices.
I like how they portray this like it is a fluke and not literally what happens every time. You get rid of a bunch of workers and save money? Line goes up.
Because the economy is not good. That's why. The media wants to say it's good in hopes that by saying it, they can manifest it and make it so. But that's not how real life works.
Okay, this is outside looking in, but economic indicators seem to be all good. However, the spreading of the gains is what's totally wrong. It all flows the a small section of the population. Tax cuts for the rich and the like didn't help with that, and the richest people in the country are pushing for an even larger share of the gains.
The economic indicators are not indicators that work for the populace at large. We need better indicators.
Just look at china's economic growth. They have built entire ghost cities and values all they built at market prices, as if they where in hot demand. And this skyrocketed the economy. It was a massive ponzi scheme., but the numbers looked great.
In western Europe, housing is scares, skyrocketing the house prices, this adds to the value of the housing pool, in turn to the total value of the economy.. and we call if growth and increase in wealth. But no one who owns their house will be able to cash in that value increase until they die. Stupid indicator if you ask me.
It all depends on what you measure and what you don't.
Selective measuring of the economy will let you say whatever you want.
"More jobs!!!11!!1!1!!!1111!1!1!!!!!"
"More precarity and high turnover, high pressure, shit conditions, shit pay, shit flexibility, shit benefits, no real pension commitment, underemployment."
Even if all the measures do exist, you don't have to report them if they go against the narrative.
And how many of these jobs are real full-time jobs instead of people looking for a second or third job as a Uber driver and how many of them are government jobs, which of course just suck people dry and are unproductive because they are paid by theft called taxes
It's fascinating, how the media tries to prop up their "side" despite the obvious reality.
Fox News praising Trump during COVID (which he absolutely blundered), and now the left media saying we have a great economy when me and all my friends are slow at work. So slow it's concerning.
The economy is booming. Your slow at work because it's winter/spring when everything slows down. I drive for a living and can tell you that from what I see, people definitely look like they feel more flush and everywhere is hiring. Not all companies have upped their starting pay to bring in the real talent but some have and those are the companies who will flourish longer term.
I'll bet you also think that global warming isn't real because you saw snow and felt cold this winter.
The economy looks to be good, but the tech sector isn't the economy. We're at the popping of another tech bubble as recently developed product lines aren't generating the returns that were expected of them. Outside of AI, there isn't a reason to invest in tech, so why people to develop in tech?
You've been brainwashed if you think the economy is actually bad. Let me guess, you think we would be having a great economy under the orange mussolini?
All metrics agree that we are doing fairly well economically speaking. The tech layoffs have nothing to do with the economy, it's 100% corporate greed and the games they play. They staffed up with cheap loans when interest rates were stupid low and paid themselves insane bonuses and now that interest rates are high again it's time to cut back on expenses.
For the record. The metrics I'm talking about DO NOT INCLUDE the stock market. While tech is seeing major layoffs, the rest of the economy is hiring like crazy. My wife's company for one is planning on doubling her team over the next year and just hired 2 more people, 1 to replace someone moving internally and a new position.
You guessed wrong. I stopped reading right there, shitlib.
Thanks for putting your tribalism brainwashed “Trump trump trump trump trump trump trump trump” accusation early on in that pile of drivel.
You: “Everyone I disagree with is a Trump supporter!”
TLDR.
Edit: to avoid future embarrassment, try this one: “the economy we are seeing right now is the delayed effect of Trump’s administration removing regulatory restrictions on oligarchic Industries.” If you had said that, I might have had an iota of respect for your perspective. But your perspective above is the equivalent of pissing on me and telling me it’s raining.
Unless you're automating business processes as a contractor brought in to be a hatchet man, the general momentum of a company and thr business politics at play are going to reduce what's possible significantly.
The big wigs might want to see cost savings, but they want to see big numbers fast. They don't want long term payoff from improved efficiency that also causes all the people under them to bitch and moan about how much they don't like change.
I say this as someone who automates shit and gets different systems to speak to each other in order to improve quality and efficiency as my job: the only way we're going to see major changes in this is if new lean companies somehow out-compete the existing monoliths by using automation. Otherwise we're just looking at incremental changes over time, not some unemployment event horizon where all goes to shit suddenly.
What is great is when you hit an issue that requires support from the automation platform vendor and their response is “we don’t know why it broke or how to fix it”. An FTE worth of licensing and support fees, and zero to show for it.