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When big companies like Meta lay off thousands of workers and blame AI, it’s easy to assume robots are taking over jobs. But acc...
Are AI Layoffs Really About AI? Adecco’s CEO Reveals the Truth Behind Job Cuts
May 23 -
2 minutes, 10 seconds
Are AI Layoffs Really About AI? The Surprising Truth
When big companies like Meta lay off thousands of workers and blame AI, it’s easy to assume robots are taking over jobs. But according to Adecco Group CEO Denis Machuel, the real reason behind most layoffs has little to do with artificial intelligence. In fact, fresh research shows that only 1.4% of laid-off workers were actually replaced by AI. So, what’s really going on?
Why Companies Blame AI for Layoffs
Many employers say they are cutting jobs because of AI implementation. But Machuel calls this a “smokescreen.” The truth? Companies use AI as an excuse to look good to investors and boost stock prices.
- Poor financial performance is the real driver behind most layoffs.
- “Hope” of AI – employers hope AI will save money, but it’s not yet replacing workers at scale.
- Stock market pressure – layoff announcements often make stock prices rise, so companies use AI as a cover.
What the Data Really Shows
Machuel shared on my podcast that Adecco’s research asked laid-off workers what replaced them. Only 1.4% said AI. The rest were let go because of cost-cutting, restructuring, or poor business results.
This matches other studies. For example, over 80% of AI projects fail, wasting billions. And a McKinsey survey found that fewer than 10% of companies have scaled AI agents in key business areas.
The Real Cost: Fear and Distrust
Even though AI isn’t replacing most jobs yet, it is replacing something else: certainty. Employees now work in fear of losing their roles. This lack of trust actually hurts AI adoption.
Adecco’s report found that trust, not technology, determines who succeeds with AI. As CHRO Hollie Castro put it: “Organizations cannot scale AI adoption faster than they scale trust.”
Why Trust Matters for AI Success
- When workers fear layoffs, they resist new tools like AI.
- Innovation slows down because employees don’t feel safe to experiment.
- Companies that use AI as a scapegoat damage long-term loyalty.
What Workers Are Really Competing Against
Today’s employee isn’t fighting against automation. They are fighting against corporate psychology that changes faster than the technology itself. Leaders who blame AI for layoffs may win short-term stock gains, but they risk losing a future workforce that trusts them.
So, are AI layoffs really about AI? Not yet. Most are about money, market pressure, and wishful thinking. The smartest companies will focus on building trust—not just rolling out AI—to succeed in the long run.
AI layoffs Adecco CEO job cuts artificial intelligence jobs workplace trust
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