What is the story about?
A senior Amazon executive with eight years of service at the company revealed on social media platform X that he was laid off amid the company’s latest round of workforce reductions — and has sharply criticized how global corporate labor practices value experience in the modern economy.
Nicholas Plumb, who had risen to Amazon’s L7 level leading global AI enablement, said in a post on X that he was among the roughly 16,000 jobs cut worldwide as part of Amazon’s latest restructuring. The company confirmed the layoffs in an internal memo shared by its senior human resources leadership, attributing the move to broader efforts to reduce bureaucracy and streamline operations.
Plumb wrote that his separation had nothing to do with performance, AI, impact, or flexibility — highlighting that he built core systems used by executives, relocated for roles, and solved long‑standing problems before still being let go. “Experience isn’t an asset, it’s a liability,” he said, arguing that highly experienced employees who command higher compensation were being “optimized out” of the workforce.
He went on to frame his firing as part of a larger global labor arbitrage trend. According to Plumb, companies now compete not just with products but across borders on wages, benefits, and protections — replacing seasoned talent with cheaper alternatives. In his view, AI is an excuse, not the underlying cause, masking deeper structural incentives that disadvantage experienced workers.
Plumb also drew a direct connection between his layoff experience and public policy, announcing his candidacy for Congress. He said his run was motivated by a belief that trade, labor, and technology policies are disconnected from the realities workers face and that meaningful reform requires rewriting the “rules” that govern labor markets.
The broader layoffs at Amazon follow a previous round in late 2025 and reflect a trend among major tech firms recalibrating workforces amid rapid adoption of AI tools and shifting strategic priorities. Amazon has said those affected will generally be offered internal job‑search windows and other transition support where applicable.
Nicholas Plumb, who had risen to Amazon’s L7 level leading global AI enablement, said in a post on X that he was among the roughly 16,000 jobs cut worldwide as part of Amazon’s latest restructuring. The company confirmed the layoffs in an internal memo shared by its senior human resources leadership, attributing the move to broader efforts to reduce bureaucracy and streamline operations.
Plumb wrote that his separation had nothing to do with performance, AI, impact, or flexibility — highlighting that he built core systems used by executives, relocated for roles, and solved long‑standing problems before still being let go. “Experience isn’t an asset, it’s a liability,” he said, arguing that highly experienced employees who command higher compensation were being “optimized out” of the workforce.
He went on to frame his firing as part of a larger global labor arbitrage trend. According to Plumb, companies now compete not just with products but across borders on wages, benefits, and protections — replacing seasoned talent with cheaper alternatives. In his view, AI is an excuse, not the underlying cause, masking deeper structural incentives that disadvantage experienced workers.
Plumb also drew a direct connection between his layoff experience and public policy, announcing his candidacy for Congress. He said his run was motivated by a belief that trade, labor, and technology policies are disconnected from the realities workers face and that meaningful reform requires rewriting the “rules” that govern labor markets.
The broader layoffs at Amazon follow a previous round in late 2025 and reflect a trend among major tech firms recalibrating workforces amid rapid adoption of AI tools and shifting strategic priorities. Amazon has said those affected will generally be offered internal job‑search windows and other transition support where applicable.



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