The silent bloodbath that’s tearing through the middle-class and rapidly flipping the US economy on its head

Elon Musk and hundreds of other tech mavens wrote an open letter two years ago about how AI was coming to ‘automate away all the jobs’ and upend society.

It looks like we should have listened to them.

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This time, it’s not blue-collar and factory workers getting whacked — it’s college graduates with white-collar jobs in tech, finance, law, and consulting.

Entry-level jobs are vanishing the fastest — stoking fears of recession and a generation of disillusioned graduates left stranded with CVs no one wants.

College grads are now much more likely to be unemployed than others, official data show.

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These ‘smartbots’ are already spotting market trends, running logistics operations, writing legal contracts, and diagnosing patients.

Layoffs are sweeping America, nixing hundreds of thousands of jobs at Microsoft , Walmart , and other titans. The newly jobless speak of a 'bloodbath' on the scale of the pandemic (this image was generated by AI)

Layoffs are sweeping America, nixing hundreds of thousands of jobs at Microsoft , Walmart , and other titans. The newly jobless speak of a ‘bloodbath’ on the scale of the pandemic (this image was generated by AI)

Glassy-eyed Patrick Lyons says he was culled in an 'emotionless business decision' by Microsoft

Glassy-eyed Patrick Lyons says he was culled in an ’emotionless business decision’ by Microsoft

Employers announced 220,000 job cuts by the end of February - the highest layoff rate since 2009

Employers announced 220,000 job cuts by the end of February – the highest layoff rate since 2009

The markets have seen the future: AI investment funds are growing by as much as 60 percent a year.

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Procter & Gamble, which makes diapers, laundry detergent, and other household items, this week said it would cut 7,000 jobs, or about 15 percent of non-manufacturing roles.

Its two-year restructuring plan involves shedding managers who can be automated away.

Microsoft last month announced a cull of 6,000 staff — about 3 percent of its workforce — targeting managerial flab, after a smaller round of performance-related cuts in January.

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Retail titan Walmart, America’s biggest private employer, is slashing 1,500 tech, sales, and advertising jobs in a streamlining effort.

Citigroup, cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, Disney, online education firm Chegg, Amazon, and Warner Bros. Discovery have culled dozens or even hundreds of their workers in recent weeks.

Musk himself led a federal sacking spree during his 130-day stint at the Department of Government Efficiency, which ended on May 30.

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Two years ago, Elon Musk warned about AI coming for your jobs. This year, he sacked tens of thousands of federal employees

Memes like this being shared on social media reveal how badly white-collar jobs have been hit

Employers had already announced 220,000 job cuts by the end of February, the highest layoff rate seen since 2009.

In announcing cuts, executives often talk about restructuring and tough economic headwinds.

Many are spooked by US President Donald Trump’s on-and-off tariffs, which sent stock markets into free-fall and prompted CEOs to second-guess their long-term plans.

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A new and more sophisticated technology — called Agentic AI — now operates more independently: perceiving the environment, setting goals, making plans, and executing them.

AI-powered software now writes reports, analyses spreadsheets, creates legal contracts, designs logos, and even drafts press releases, all in seconds.

Banks are axing graduate recruitment schemes.

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Managers increasingly seek to become ‘AI first’ and test whether tasks can be done by AI before hiring a human.

Walmart's next-generation fulfillment center in Joliet, Illinois, uses people, robots, and AI to boost efficiency.  The company is now slashing 1,500 tech, sales, and advertising jobs

Walmart’s next-generation fulfillment center in Joliet, Illinois, uses people, robots, and AI to boost efficiency.  The company is now slashing 1,500 tech, sales, and advertising jobs

Dario Amodei, CEO of leading AI company Anthropic, has warned of mass unemployment

Dario Amodei, CEO of leading AI company Anthropic, has warned of mass unemployment

That’s now company policy at Shopify. It’s how fintech firm Klarna shrank its headcount by 40 percent, CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski told CNBC last month.

Experienced workers are encouraged to automate tasks and get more work done; recent graduates are struggling to get their foot in the door.

From a distance, the job market looks relatively buoyant, with unemployment holding steady at 4.2 percent for the third consecutive month, the Labor Department reported on Friday.

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Economists warn of an AI-induced downturn, as millions lose jobs, spending plummets, and social unrest festers.

It’s been dubbed an industrial revolution for the modern era, but one that’s measured in years, not decades.

Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, one of the world’s most powerful AI firms, says we’re at the start of a storm.

AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs — and spike unemployment to 10-20 percent in the next one to five years, he told Axios.

Lawmakers have their heads in the sand and must stop ‘sugar-coating’ the grim reality of the late 2020s, Amodei said.

‘Most of them are unaware that this is about to happen,’ he said.

Donald King was unceremoniously laid off from his data science job at consulting firm PwC

Donald King was unceremoniously laid off from his data science job at consulting firm PwC

Sacked workers have taken to social media to vent their frustrations about the new tech crunch

Sacked workers have taken to social media to vent their frustrations about the new tech crunch

‘It sounds crazy, and people just don’t believe it.’

Young people who’ve been culled are taking to social media to vent their anger as the door to a middle-class lifestyle closes on them.

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Her job search is going badly — one recruiter appeared more interested in taking her out for drinks than offering a paycheck, she said.

‘I feel like s**t,’ she added.

Ben Wolfson, a young Meta software engineer, says entry-level software jobs dried up in 2023.

‘Big tech doesn’t want you, bro,’ he says.

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Donald King posted a recording of the meeting in which he was unceremoniously laid off from his data science job at consulting firm PwC.

Robots and machines have for decades been usurping blue-collar factory workers

Robots and machines have for decades been usurping blue-collar factory workers

‘RIP my AI factory job,’ he said. ‘I built the thing that destroyed me.’

He now posts from Porto, in Portugal — a popular spot for digital nomads — where he’s founded a marketing startup.

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Optimists point to such careers as radiology — where humans initially looked set to be outmoded by machines that could speedily read medical scans and pinpoint tumors.

But the layoffs didn’t happen.

The technology has been adopted — but radiologists adapted, using AI to sharpen images and automate some tasks, and boost productivity.

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Others say AI is a scapegoat for 2025’s job cuts — that executives are downsizing for economic reasons, and blaming technology so as not to panic shareholders.

But for those who have lost their jobs, the future looks bleak.

* Original Article:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/yourmoney/article-14785245/bloodbath-tearing-middle-class-US-economy.html