Thread regarding Dell Inc. layoffs

99 Percent of CEOs Are Preparing to Lay Off Workers and Replace Them With AI Within Two Years, Survey Finds

Fear of AI is at an all-time high. Not fear of a Skynet-style superintelligent singularity seizing power, generally speaking, but of something perhaps just as horrifying: that life under capitalism continues much as it always has, with one key difference — AI has made human labor obsolete.

A new survey by consulting firm Mercer polled nearly 1,000 executives across the United States. A jaw-dropped 98 percent of them said they have major organization design changes in the works around AI, while 99 percent expect AI will lead to layoffs over the next two years.

The Mercer report, first covered by TechSpot, also found a collapse in worker wellbeing as talk of AI dominates break rooms. In 2024, Mercer worker’s sentiment found 66 percent of employees surveyed said they are “thriving” in the workplace. By 2026, that number had fallen to just 44 percent.

At the same time, the number of workers who report being “unsatisfied” has skyrocketed, with over 20 percent of workers surveyed admitting they’re “unsatisfied but… don’t have a choice at this point and will be staying for the next 12 months​.”

How human resources managers plan to combat this workplace fatigue — symptomatic of a rapidly decaying labor market, not to mention stagnant wages across the board — is equally alarming. In the next two years, 49 percent of HR professionals say incorporating worker sentiments with behavioral data will become “critical” to managing labor on the job. A further 44 and 43 percent said the same of always-on surveillance platforms and AI chatbots, respectively.

To the business owners and corporatists of the world, this is the point of AI: to discipline human labor. That’s the large-scale economic process by which capitalists undermine workers’ bargaining power, through systemic mechanisms like debt, the so-called gig economy, unemployment, deskilling — and, according to some theorists, even the nuclear family.

In the workplace and outside of it, AI boosts these mechanisms, eroding workers’ power to demand change or even hold onto basic concessions like healthcare and pensions — labor rights begrudgingly pried from corporations after decades of workplace struggle.

The technology doesn’t even need to be particularly effective to achieve any of this. Business leaders like Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke are already using AI to squeeze more value from their workers, while venture capitalists use it to pry equity back from theirs. In some cases, managers are even using AI chatbots to decide who to fire.

In all, the picture is pretty grim. The richest men and women in the world have made it abundantly clear why they want AI. The tech may not be living up to their wild expectations quite yet, but they’re still unleashing it without hesitation. The only question is how workers respond now, before that hellish dystopia we all fear becomes our reality.

https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/99-percent-ceos-workers-ai-survey

You may now understand why employees' dissatisfaction at Dell sunk and will keep sinking.


by
| 1 view | | 4 replies (last 11 days ago) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1ksr7wh72

4 replies (most recent on top)

That may be true however the true cost is no being seen in its current form. With companies token maxing they are wasting allot of money think of our forced sales chat usage. They are being billed for that by someone. The cfo of uber just stated last week he does not see the ROI on their AI spend and has already blown through their budget for the year. At the end of the day AI in its current form is too costly makes many mistakes and people don’t want or like it.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @hp+1ksr7wh72

Tell us something we don't already know Sherlock

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ap+1ksr7wh72

Maybe but, they are also realizing how EXPENSIVE AI actually is! AI sounds great on paper until you start implementing it and the costs keep rising... AI can do a lot of things and easily replace a lot of jobs but, what will end up happening is companies will layoff and then regret it because AI can't do things that humans can do.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ah+1ksr7wh72

And many are now finding that AI is more expensive in the long run than humans. But if we lay everyone off, there will be no consumers left. Businesses will crumble.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ab+1ksr7wh72

Post a reply

: