The disruption in the tech industry is no news at all. However, the economic basis for the same continues to look increasingly thin.
As of the end of May 2026, the tech industry layoffs recorded during the year were more than the astonishing number of 140,000 across the globe, according to monitoring websites like Layoffs.fyi and SkillSyncer. In May alone, around 30,000 tech jobs were laid off in the mass layoff process that included companies like Meta, Cisco, Intuit, PayPal, and Wix.
May Layoff
During their interactions with the investment community, tech CEOs keep referring to the usual scapegoats of macroeconomics – interest rates going up, overhiring following COVID, and restructuring.
However, once they take a more critical view of the financial statements of companies and organizational restructuring processes, it becomes obvious that there is nothing to do with starving organizations of cash here. It is all about the historic change in the workforce in the tech sphere. The change involves replacing engineers, customers' assistance staff, and middle management with self-sustained AI systems.
Massive Profits, Huge CapEx
Perhaps the clearest indication that these job losses are structural and not economic is the vast amounts of money that these companies are investing somewhere else. While tech companies are very profitable firms, they are expected to invest a huge amount of $700 billion into their CapEx this year.
What does this money go towards? Investments are directly being made in building dedicated AI data centers, buying next-gen chips, and implementing autonomous enterprise systems.
"In order to win in this era of AI, we must focus and act with urgency," Chuck Robbins, Cisco's CEO, said in a memo regarding restructuring. "We must demonstrate the discipline to shift our investments from area to area in order to address demands for high-value creation opportunities."
It is clear that one simply has to take away people's salaries to pay for computing power required for the automation of businesses.
The Era of Permanent Substitution
While during the years of 2024 and 2025 AI was used as an auxiliary instrument that increased human effectiveness in generating code or summarizing large chunks of text or sorting customer inquiries, in the mid-2026-year Large Language Models (LLMs) were ready to be deployed in the full-scale production.
In contrast to outdated generative AI assistants, LLMs are capable of performing complicated workflows, interacting with company tools and services, fixing errors, working simultaneously with information from various databases, etc.
As such, technological firms are moving swiftly from trials to full replacement of their employees. There are several characteristics among jobs which will soon become obsolete:
1. Mid-Level Software Developers: While the traditional software developers tasked with coding using standard syntax are becoming obsolete, the current technology is using automatic “vibe programming” to code the code internally through Microsoft’s Copilot by 30 percent.
2. Quality Assurance and Data Entry: Tedious testing processes and data entry jobs are all taken care of by autonomous testing bots throughout the day.
3. Operations and Customer Service: Companies such as Cloudflare and Wix are cutting back 15 to 20 percent of staffs because autonomous voice and text-based agents are efficiently handling the customer process flow.
From "Pivot" to "Agent Supervision"
As far as the professionals employed in the technology sector in America are concerned, the "pivot" has resulted in unprecedented instability in the job market. This can be seen from the results published by a recently conducted Glassdoor Employee Confidence Index, where employee confidence within the tech industry fell to an all-time low of 47.2%. Because of economic concerns, employee turnover has decreased, resulting in strict performance evaluation.
But here is where the pivot is producing a new kind of tech professional – AI Agent Supervisor.
As the world shifts from human-execution enterprise systems to agent-execution enterprise systems, organizations have been forced to hire people who can design, validate, and control such systems. Everything has shifted completely from skills related to writing code to the ability to design prompt orchestration architecture, manage RAGs, and validate AI outputs.
Reality Check: Based on a recent Gartner survey tracking enterprises across the world, while 80% of companies that reduced their AI staff saved money upfront, hidden costs await them down the road in the form of security vulnerabilities, system integration challenges, and hallucination management. For the tech industry, the bottom-line message from May 2026 is no human effort will vanish, just jobs as we know them today will drastically transform. If you want to survive, you need to swim against the tide of machine execution to become the orchestration master.

