Amazon Announces 14 000 Corporate Job Cuts as AI Investment Accelerates
E-commerce giant shifts resources to generative AI and cloud infrastructure while streamlining its corporate headcount
Amazon has announced the elimination of approximately fourteen thousand corporate positions, marking one of the largest single workforce reductions in the company’s history.
The cuts, disclosed in a message to employees on Tuesday, form part of a broader restructure aimed at creating a leaner organisation and reallocating resources toward key growth areas such as artificial intelligence and cloud infrastructure.
In the internal communication, senior vice-president Beth Galetti wrote that Amazon must become “organised more leanly, with fewer layers and more ownership, to move as quickly as possible for our customers and business.” The initiative aligns with chief executive Andy Jassy’s enduring ambition to operate Amazon “like the world’s largest start-up.”
The company said that most affected employees will be offered ninety days to apply for other internal roles, with the recruiting teams prioritised to assist them.
Severance and outplacement support will be provided to those who do not transition to new roles.
Amazon’s corporate headcount is approximately three hundred and fifty thousand, out of a total global workforce of about one point 56 million.
By this measure the reduction represents roughly four per cent of the corporate workforce—though earlier reports had indicated the company may cut as many as thirty thousand roles, or around ten per cent of the corporate staff.
Analysts interpreting the move say that Amazon is not under immediate financial duress—rather the decision reflects an acceleration of efficiency efforts.
One analyst described the move as “a deep cleaning of Amazon’s corporate workforce” amid massive investments in AI and data-centre expansion.
In June of this year, Jassy had publicly predicted that growing use of generative AI tools would lead to a reduction in the company’s total corporate workforce in the coming years.
This current action is consistent with that outlook.
Amazon is simultaneously ramping up capital expenditure, with the current investment run-rate estimated at about one hundred and eighteen billion dollars for the year, much of it directed toward cloud and AI capability.
The company sees the new technical infrastructure and automation as enabling faster innovation and requiring fewer layers of human management.
Some of the planned cuts will affect the human-resources division, known internally as People eXperience and Technology (PXT), which reportedly may cut up to fifteen per cent of its roles.
Other business units likely to be impacted include operations, devices and services, and the cloud-computing arm.
The organisation’s strategic intent is to redirect savings from workforce streamlining into its “biggest bets” such as internal generative AI development, enhanced customer-facing applications and more efficient corporate operations.
Employees who embrace the AI-driven transition and build relevant capabilities are being positioned for high-impact roles, according to internal messaging.
While this cuts a significant number of jobs, Amazon’s leadership emphasises the company remains financially robust, and that this restructuring is undertaken in the service of long-term competitiveness rather than short-term crisis management.