November 20, 2025
November 20, 2025
Photo by Bryan Angelo on Unsplash
Mass layoffs at corporate giants like Amazon, UPS and Verizon in recent weeks have drawn attention to a sluggish labor market and stoked fears that job losses may spread.
The high-profile cuts have coincided with stubborn inflation and wobbly economic performance, threatening to worsen a cost-of-living crunch if paychecks dry up.
It is likely too early to panic, however, some economists told ABC News. While the layoffs reflect a weakened labor market and AI adoption in some corners of the tech industry, they added, the prospect of wider job losses remains highly uncertain.
A thick fog clouds the outlook due to a weeks-long delay in the government’s release of gold-standard monthly hiring data. A clearer picture will emerge on Thursday with the release of jobs data for September, though the Trump administration has indicated October figures may never be published.
For now, the unemployment rate has continued to hover at historically low levels and the economy has suffered only minor job losses, even if years of uninterrupted job gains appear to have passed.
"Unemployment is very low – it’s hard to do a lot better,” Philipp Kircher, a professor of industrial and labor relations at Cornell University, told ABC News. “How some of the current weaknesses will play out is much harder to tell.”
Last month, Amazon announced plans to lay off about 14,000 corporate employees, saying the company aimed to thin out bureaucracy and invest in “our biggest bets,” such as artificial intelligence. On the same day, UPS said the company had cut 14,000 management positions this year, while slashing an additional 34,000 operational roles.
UPS sought to "create a more efficient operating model that was more responsive to market dynamics," the company said.
Verizon is set to cut 15,000 workers within the coming days, marking the largest layoff in the telecom company’s history, the Wall Street Journal reported last week.
Such layoffs can be devastating for the employees directly involved and understandably concerning for workers across the economy, but the job cuts amount to a small fraction of the nation’s workforce, Cory Stahle, an economist at Indeed Hiring Lab, told ABC News.
“We look at tens of thousands of people being laid off as a big number,” Stahle said. “It’s important to understand that we’re talking about tens of thousands of workers out of about 160 million people employed nationwide.”
Jobs data for the month of August -- the most recent on record -- found about 163 million people are currently employed in the U.S., the Bureau of Labor Statistics said.
Headline-grabbing layoff announcements often overshadow hiring initiatives undertaken elsewhere at around the same time, often offsetting the job losses, Ioana Marinescu, a professor of labor economics at the University of Pennsylvania, told ABC News.
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