In a bold move signaling the transformative power of artificial intelligence, Jack Dorsey’s fintech giant Block has announced the layoff of 4,000 employees, slashing its workforce by 40 percent from 10,000 to 6,000. The Twitter co-founder, now steering Block—formerly known as Square—shared the decision on X, formerly Twitter, emphasizing that this restructuring is driven by rapid advancements in AI tools and the shift toward leaner, more efficient teams.
Dorsey was candid in his post, assuring stakeholders that the company’s fundamentals remain rock-solid. ‘We’re not doing this out of distress. Our business is strong—total profit is consistently growing, we’re serving more customers than ever, and margins are improving,’ he wrote. The layoffs, he explained, are a proactive response to AI’s potential to redefine how companies operate, fostering a ‘new way of working’ that demands fewer but more specialized roles.
Affected employees won’t be left empty-handed. Block is offering a generous severance package: 20 weeks of pay, plus one week per year of service, equity vesting through late May, six months of healthcare coverage, company devices, and a $5,000 transition stipend. Dorsey stressed the importance of a single, decisive cut over repeated rounds, arguing that ongoing layoffs erode employee morale, focus, and investor confidence in leadership.
This isn’t an isolated incident in the tech sector. Industry leaders predict that most high-level desk jobs could be automated within the next 12 to 18 months. Oracle is planning to trim 20,000 to 30,000 positions to bolster its AI data centers, while Amazon recently axed 16,000 jobs amid its own AI overhaul. Meanwhile, a PwC India report forecasts AI could inject $550 billion into India’s economy by 2035 across key sectors like agriculture, education, energy, healthcare, and manufacturing.
As AI continues to disrupt traditional employment models, Block’s move underscores a broader industry pivot. Companies are betting big on automation to stay competitive, even as they navigate the human cost of innovation. Dorsey’s vision points to a future where smaller teams wielding intelligent tools drive outsized results, but questions linger about the long-term societal impact of such widespread job cuts.