Amazon.com's lay-offs will increase to more than 18,000 roles as part of a workforce reduction it previously disclosed, chief executive Andy Jassy says.
The lay-off decisions, which Amazon will communicate
starting January 18, will largely impact the company's e-commerce and
human-resources organisations, Mr Jassy said in a public staff note on
Wednesday.
The cuts amount to 6 per cent of Amazon's roughly
300,000-person corporate workforce and represent a swift about turn for a
retailer that recently doubled its base pay ceiling to compete more
aggressively for talent.
Amazon has more than 1.5 million workers including warehouse
staff, making it America's second-largest private employer after Walmart.
Its stock rose 2 per cent in after-hours trade.
Mr Jassy said in the note that annual planning "has
been more difficult given the uncertain economy and that we've hired rapidly
over the last several years".
Amazon has braced for likely slower growth as soaring
inflation encouraged businesses and consumers to cut back spending and its
share price has halved in the past year.
The company began letting staff go in November from its
devices division, with a source telling Reuters at the time it was targeting
around 10,000 cuts.
The tech industry shed more than 150,000 workers in 2022,
according to tracking site Layoffs.fyi, a number that's continuing to grow.
Salesforce said on Wednesday that it planned to eliminate
about 10 per cent of staff, which numbered nearly 8,000 as of October 31.
The reversal of Amazon's fortunes has been stark.
It changed from a business deemed essential during the
pandemic for delivering goods to locked-down homes, to a company that overbuilt
for demand.
Its lay-offs now surpass the 11,000 cuts announced last year
by Facebook-parent Meta.
Mr Jassy's note followed a report in the Wall Street Journal
that the reduction would be more than 17,000 jobs.
He said Amazon chose to disclose the news before informing
affected staff because of a leak.
Amazon still must file certain legal notices about mass
lay-offs, and it plans to pay severance.
"Amazon has weathered uncertain and difficult economies
in the past, and we will continue to do so," Mr Jassy said. -Reuters