Everyday Economics: Is AI to blame for the layoffs – or a late-cycle hangover?

Spread the love

(THE Center Square) – U.S. employers announced 153,074 job cuts in October – the worst October since 2003 – and headlines rushed to blame AI. Fair question: were the recent layoffs really caused by AI? Mostly, no. Cost-cutting was the top reason in October, with AI a distant second (roughly 20% of those layoffs). The sectors leading reductions – tech and warehousing – are also the ones that over-hired during the boom and are now normalizing.

Meanwhile, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is tracking -4.0% real GDP growth again, keeping the “reacceleration” narrative alive. But a big slice of that strength reflects front-loaded AI capex – data centers, chips, power – whose spillovers into day-to-day production are still thin on the ground. Multiple sell-side trackers estimate AI investment added -0.5 to 1.1 percentage points to growth in the first half of 2025; impressive, but not the same as broad-based productivity gains. Without complementary investments – manager training, workflow redesign, data plumbing – this boost risks being temporary, and growth will fall to reflect the weak state of the labor market.

That framing matters for how we read AI’s macro impact. The promise is real, but the productivity boom isn’t, yet. The economics literature and firms’ own data point to rapid experimentation and shallow, concentrated adoption where it counts: the gritty day-to-day production processes inside companies. Even official data suggest in-production use remains modest. The Census Bureau’s Business Trends and Outlook Survey (BTOS) – our most conservative gauge – shows single-digit to low-double-digit adoption, with small firms near 5.8-7% and large firms around 11-13.5% in mid-2025. “Using AI somewhere” (a pilot, a Slack bot, a marketing test) is not the same as rewiring workflows, retraining managers, and budgeting for error modes.

Economic theory helps translate buzz into growth math. In The Simple Macroeconomics of AI, Daron Acemoglu shows that gains to total factor productivity (how efficiently we turn labor and capital into output) depend on two numbers: what share of tasks is actually transformed and how big the cost savings are on those tasks. Dazzling demos don’t move GDP unless they change a large slice of work, at scale, for a sustained period. On plausible assumptions from today’s evidence, the implied TFP lift over the next decade looks modest – tenths of a percentage point, not whole points.

Micro evidence is encouraging, but narrow. In a Fortune 500 support center, giving agents a chat assistant boosted productivity ~14–15% on average, with the largest gains for less-experienced workers. In randomized writing experiments, generative AI cuts time ~40% while lifting quality. Those are serious, repeatable wins, especially for standardized, well-scoped tasks. But they’re not the same as economy-wide transformation.

The shallow adoption story explains why AI related layoffs remain low and concentrated. Instead, it is a slowing economy that is to blame for the bulk of layoffs. As the economy slows and margins get squeezed, managers pull familiar late-cycle levers: freeze hiring, consolidate roles, and cut costs – especially in sectors that over-expanded in 2020–2022.

Here’s the bottom line: The economy is slowing. And as the government shutdown continues, the risk of recession rises. October’s layoffs weren’t mostly “because of AI.” They look like a late-cycle hangover in sectors that hired ahead of themselves – with AI as a visible, secondary catalyst. Yes, GDPNow near 4% reflects a meaningful AI-capex tailwind, but without the complements, that lift is temporary. Until adoption is deep (and wide) and workflows are rebuilt, the macro math won’t add up – and growth will settle back toward the labor market’s reality.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Authorities say shooting at Dallas ICE facility was 'targeted' attack

Authorities say shooting at Dallas ICE facility was ‘targeted’ attack

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Multiple people have been shot at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas, Texas, including two fatalities, in what law enforcement officials are describing...
Amid Dallas shooting, assaults on ICE up 1,000%

Amid Dallas shooting, assaults on ICE up 1,000%

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Wednesday’s shooting at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas comes as assaults against ICE officers are up more than 1,000% compared to...
IL bans PFAS in firefighter gear by 2027, raising safety, market questions

IL bans PFAS in firefighter gear by 2027, raising safety, market questions

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois firefighters will soon be wearing protective gear free of PFAS, or “forever chemicals,” under a...
WATCH: Pritzker blames Trump for budget cut EO; Chicago public safety on Trump’s mind

WATCH: Pritzker blames Trump for budget cut EO; Chicago public safety on Trump’s mind

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop shares reaction from...
Cato scholar calls Trump's Antifa executive order 'idiotic'

Cato scholar calls Trump’s Antifa executive order ‘idiotic’

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A top Cato scholar said President Donald Trump's move to designate Antifa a domestic terror organization was "idiotic." Patrick Eddington, a senior fellow in homeland...
Pro-life group announces $4.5 million for 2026 U.S. Senate race

Pro-life group announces $4.5 million for 2026 U.S. Senate race

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square A national pro-life advocacy group has announced plans to invest $4.5 million into Michigan’s open U.S. Senate seat ahead of the 2026 election season. The...
Multiple people shot at Dallas ICE facility

Multiple people shot at Dallas ICE facility

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Three people were shot, including fatalities, at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas, Texas, Wednesday morning. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem confirmed the...
Louisiana joins four states in complaint against electricity grid operator

Louisiana joins four states in complaint against electricity grid operator

By Nolan Mckendry | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Louisiana and four other state public service commissions have filed a formal complaint against the Midcontinent Independent...
Illinois quick hits: State rep. appointed circuit judge; Bailey to seek rematch with Pritzker

Illinois quick hits: State rep. appointed circuit judge; Bailey to seek rematch with Pritzker

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square State rep. appointed circuit judge Justice Mary K. O’Brien and the Illinois Supreme Court have announced the appointment of state Rep....
Heather Nohren Appointed Vice President for Student Services at Lake Land College

Heather Nohren Appointed Vice President for Student Services at Lake Land College

Article Summary: The Lake Land College Board of Trustees has appointed Heather Nohren as the new Vice President for Student Services. The appointment, effective August 18, was approved unanimously following...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Casey-Westfield School Board for September 15, 2025

The Casey-Westfield Board of Education unanimously adopted the district's budget for the 2025-2026 school year during a straightforward meeting on Monday, Sept. 15. The vote followed a brief public hearing...
Leavitt calls for firing UN staff if Trump's escalator stopped intentionally

Leavitt calls for firing UN staff if Trump’s escalator stopped intentionally

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The White House called for an investigation of a United Nations security team after alleging that staffers may have intentionally stopped the escalator carrying President...
Figures show California is state with highest unemployment

Figures show California is state with highest unemployment

By Dave MasonThe Center Square Despite Gov. Gavin Newsom bragging about California being the world’s fourth-largest economy, the Golden State isn't striking gold for jobs. California continues to have the...
Teacher union sues feds for delaying loan forgiveness

Teacher union sues feds for delaying loan forgiveness

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The American Federation of Teachers sued the Trump administration this past week over delaying student loan forgiveness, arguing it is unlawful. The AFT filed a...
Catholic law professor says lower courts botched tariff rulings

Catholic law professor says lower courts botched tariff rulings

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A Catholic law professor told the nation's highest court Tuesday that President Donald Trump's tariffs are on solid legal ground after two lower courts' botched...