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Recent Editions
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Human Times
North America
IRS reassigns staff to taxpayer services amid filing season workforce strain

The IRS has temporarily reassigned employees from IT and human capital offices to taxpayer services roles during the current filing season, as the agency grapples with staffing cuts. Affected staff have been placed on 120-day involuntary details as customer service representatives or tax examiners, with training beginning in late February. The move follows warnings from the Treasury Inspector General that the IRS has lost about 19% of its workforce since October 2025, including significant reductions in IT and filing-related staff, potentially jeopardizing system upgrades and modernization efforts. While the agency says the reassignments are intended to support taxpayers during its busiest period, some employees have raised concerns that diverting IT personnel could further delay technology projects and increase processing backlogs.

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Human Times
UK
UK unemployment soars to five-year high

UK unemployment has reached 5.2%, the highest level since early 2021, according to the latest labour market data. The jobless rate increased from 5.1% in the previous quarter, with 130,000 fewer workers on payrolls over the year. Young people, disabled people and men are bearing the brunt of the rise. Earnings growth also slowed, with basic pay rising by 4.2%, down from 4.4%. In London, the unemployment rate surged to 7.6%, nearly double the 4% rate in the south east. Youth unemployment has reached 18.8% in the capital, compared with 14% country-wide, with the number of 18-24 year olds out of work up by 80,000 on the quarter to 575,000. Liz McKeown at the Office for National Statistics also notes that private sector wage growth continues to slow and is at its lowest rate in five years, while public sector pay growth also slowed but remains elevated. Commenting on the figures, Suren Thiru, economics director at the Institute of Chartered Accountants, said: "The UK's jobs market is continuing to come apart at the seams as the stifling squeeze from spiralling labour costs pushes more businesses to pivot from simply freezing recruitment to actively cutting jobs."

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Human Times
Europe
Russia taps India for workers

Russia is facing a significant labour shortage exacerbated by the ongoing war in Ukraine. Traditional sources of labour from Central Asia have dwindled, prompting Moscow to turn to India for assistance. In 2022, nearly 72,000 work permits were issued to Indian nationals, an increase from 5,000 in 2021. President Vladimir Putin and Indian Prime ‌Minister Narendra Modi signed a deal in December to make it easier for Indians to work in Russia. Denis Manturov, Russia's first ‌deputy prime minister, said at the time that Russia could accept an “unlimited number” of Indian workers.

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Human Times
Middle East
AI threatens millions of office jobs, says Microsoft boss

Mustafa Suleyman, Microsoft's AI chief, predicts that most white-collar jobs could be fully automated within 12 to 18 months. He said that AI is nearing "human-level performance" in tasks including law, accounting, and project management. Suleyman noted that AI-assisted coding is already common in software engineering. The potential job losses could be severe, with estimates suggesting up to 80% of entry-level positions might be at risk.

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