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by Izikiel43 341 days ago
Disclaimer, not an economist.

A coincidental combination of economical conditions happened before the layoffs, and I know correlation doesn't imply causation, but these conditions look like a big cause:

* Companies hired like crazy in Covid * Section 174 got disabled * Interest rates rose

This made money much more expensive, and employees became a much higher cost due to the fact you hired like crazy, so you have a ton more, and you can't amortize them, also combined with fears of recession in 2023.

In a very short term, this cocktail of conditions made operating a company much more expensive, thus the layoffs and reorgs as an attempt to cut costs.

What you are saying is also true, but I see that taking effect over a longer period of time.

2 comments

When companies were hiring like crazy, were they really not expecting interest rates to rise in the future? Just how deep was the faith in MMT that printing all that stimulus wouldn't cause inflation? Personally I was surprised it took as long as it did.
From what I've seen so far, one company does something and the others do the same to not get left behind.

Company A hires like crazy due to Covid, then everyone else does the same because they must be on to something!

I agree, I don't know why they expected covid conditions to be the new normal.

I think the only company who didn't get on the crazy hiring bandwagon was Apple.

In my experience the higher up you get on the corporate ladder, the less you’re going to be held accountable for anything. Executives only stick around until they get bored or can cash out. Five years down the line it might as well be a totally different company.
Also shift in organizational investment away toward AI and away from earlier hotness.