The conversation about artificial intelligence has become a convenient headline. It is simple, dramatic, and easy to understand: machines are coming for jobs. But the reality of what is happening to employment in 2025 and 2026 is far less clean and far more uncomfortable. AI is not the main story. It is, at best, a supporting character in a much broader restructuring of work.
A labour market already under pressure
Long before AI entered the mainstream, the global labour market was shifting under the weight of economic and structural pressures. Layoffs have surged across industries. In 2025 alone, employers announced close to 1.1 million job cuts, the highest level since the pandemic era.
That trend has carried into 2026, with over 100 companies already announcing layoffs across sectors ranging from finance to logistics. These cuts are not confined to technology. Warehousing, retail, government, and transportation are among the hardest hit sectors.
The pattern suggests something deeper than automation. Companies are shrinking, restructuring, and correcting years of over-expansion, especially after the hiring surge that followed the pandemic.
The era of “efficiency” is here
What is often labelled as “AI-driven layoffs” is frequently something else: a push for efficiency.
Major corporations are cutting costs, simplifying operations, and eliminating redundancy. This includes closing underperforming branches, reducing middle management, and consolidating global teams. Even where AI is mentioned, it is often aspirational rather than operational. Some companies are laying off workers based on what AI might do in the future, not what it is currently doing.
In other words, jobs are being cut in anticipation, not direct replacement.
A hiring freeze disguised as stability
Another shift is less visible but equally important: hiring has slowed down.
Instead of mass layoffs alone, many companies are simply not replacing workers who leave. Job postings, particularly in tech, have declined, while experience requirements for available roles are rising.
This creates what feels like a “silent contraction.” Employment numbers may not collapse overnight, but opportunities shrink steadily. For young people entering the workforce, this is already visible. Entry-level roles are harder to find, not necessarily because AI has taken them, but because companies are hiring fewer people overall.
Growth is uneven, not disappearing
While some sectors are contracting, others are expanding.
Healthcare continues to grow. Skilled trades are seeing renewed demand. Infrastructure-related jobs are rising, especially in areas tied to energy, logistics, and physical systems.
This uneven growth highlights a key reality: jobs are not disappearing. They are moving. Projections suggest that while millions of jobs may be displaced globally by the end of the decade, even more new roles will be created, resulting in a net gain.
The real crisis is a mismatch, not a replacement
The most significant shift in employment today is not automation. It is a mismatch.
Workers are losing jobs in sectors that are shrinking, while new roles are emerging in areas that require different skills. This creates friction.
A factory worker cannot easily transition into a data analyst. A retail employee cannot instantly become a healthcare technician.
This gap is widening. Employers are increasingly looking for specialised, adaptable workers, while large portions of the workforce remain tied to declining industries. The result is a labour market that feels broken, even when jobs technically exist.
The global dimension is often ignored
In developing economies, the situation is even more complex.
Many countries have a high concentration of low-skill jobs, which are more vulnerable to both automation and economic shifts. At the same time, these economies often lack the infrastructure for rapid reskilling. This creates a double vulnerability, where workers face both structural economic changes and technological disruption simultaneously.
For countries like Nigeria, this is critical. The challenge is not just AI. It is how global shifts in supply chains, outsourcing, and digital services reshape local employment opportunities.
The AI narrative is too convenient
Focusing on AI as the primary threat to jobs does something subtle but dangerous. It simplifies a complex issue into a single cause.
It allows companies to justify layoffs as inevitable. It shifts attention away from economic policy, corporate decision-making, and global market dynamics.
And it creates a sense of helplessness among workers, as if job loss is an unavoidable consequence of technological progress.
But the data tells a different story.
Layoffs are being driven by cost-cutting, restructuring, and strategic repositioning. Hiring is slowing due to uncertainty. Growth is happening, but in different sectors. AI is part of this picture, but it is not the whole frame.
What is actually happening to employment
Employment is not collapsing; it is fragmenting.
Stable, long-term roles are giving way to more flexible, skill-based work. Career paths are becoming less predictable. The idea of a single profession for life is fading.
At the same time, inequality in the labour market is increasing. High-skill workers are seeing new opportunities, while low- and mid-skill workers face greater instability.
A debate that misses the point
The obsession with AI replacing jobs misses the more urgent question: how work itself is being redefined. The real issue is whether workers can adapt to a labour market that is changing faster than institutions can keep up.
Education systems are currently lagging, training programmes are fragmented, and policy responses are slow. Until those gaps are addressed, the conversation about AI will remain what it currently is: a distraction from the deeper forces reshaping employment.










