Intel is laying off over 15,000 employees and will stop ‘non-essential work’
Intel is laying off over 15,000 employees and will stop ‘non-essential work’
That’s a lot of layoffs.
So they got all that money from Uncle Sam's CHIPS Act only to lay off 10,000 employees and make themselves "lean". Govt funded unemployment.
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ApollosArrow @lemmy.world What’s crazy to me is that they are laying off more employees than the total number of full time employees I’ve worked at for most companies.
They are laying off 12% of their work force.
112 1 Replykameecoding @lemmy.world That's what happens when companies are too fucking big, and intel was essentially a monopoly for a while.
I have interned at AT&T while at University, laying off a 1000 people would be less than 1 % for them.
14 0 ReplyApollosArrow @lemmy.world After seeing this article I went down a rabbit hole and IBM isn’t even in the top 10 US of most employees. Here’s some of the popular ones from the top 30.
- Walmart - 2.3 Million
- Amazon - 1.61 Million
- DHL - 594,000
- FedEx - 547,000
- UPS - 536,000
- Home Depot - 456,000
- Target - 415,000
- Kroger - 414,000
- Marriott - 411,000
- Starbucks - 381,000
- Walgreens - 333,000
- Pepsi - 318,000
- Costco - 316,000
- Chase - 309,000
- Lowes - 300,000
- IBM - 282,000
- CVS - 219,000
- Bank of America - 212,000
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_United_States–based_employers_globally
2 0 Reply...m... @ttrpg.network ...i'm surprised to see DHL rank so highly in that list: what's their domestic market focus, business-to-business freight logistics?..i seldom see DHL packages and when i do they're almost exclusively of international origin...
1 0 ReplyApollosArrow @lemmy.world That was also my thought as well. I only use DHL with some international orders, so I questioned their placement on that list.
1 0 Reply
Angry_Autist (he/him) @lemmy.world ... the 12 percent that actually does something too...
7 1 Reply