Over the last year, several major employers — including at least one Biglaw firm and one corporate legal department — have announced large-scale layoffs, citing AI-driven efficiency as a rationale.
In some cases, AI may be merely a pretext for routine cutbacks. In others, AI is a real factor, but the layoffs are driven more by the technology’s potential rather than by its reality.
According to a recent study in Harvard Business Review, 60% of more than 1,000 global executives surveyed said they had reduced headcount in anticipation of AI efficiency gains, while just 2% said they’d made large reductions based on actual AI results.
One likely result of decisions based on wishful thinking is that many people who were fired will end up being rehired. As reported in Law.com, both the advisory firm Gartner and Forrester Research predict that half of AI-attributed layoffs will be reversed.
Legal recruiter Daniel Vahab told Law.com that some employers have been acting out of “FOMO.” “They went with the trend and the hype, and it’s sort of backfired,” he noted, “and now a lot of firms are scrambling to bring people back and fill those roles.”
The ‘Layoff Boomerang’: Why Firms Are Scrambling to Rehire Talent in the AI Era [Law.com]
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