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Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
Meta and Microsoft are preparing staff reductions while continuing heavy investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure and talent. Meta plans to cut 10% of its workforce, or about 8,000 roles, as it seeks efficiency alongside capital expenditure of up to $135bn. Janelle Gale, Meta’s chief people officer, said the reductions would help “offset the other investments we’re making.” Microsoft will offer voluntary redundancy to about 8,750 eligible U.S. employees and change its employee stock reward rules. The moves show how major technology companies are trying to control operating costs while funding large AI commitments, including infrastructure expansion and recruitment of specialist engineering talent.
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Human Times
UK
John Lewis has told head office staff to spend more time working in person as the retailer seeks to improve performance and keep pace with rivals moving away from remote working. Employees are expected to be "more in person than not" - either in the office or with suppliers and customers - to strengthen collaboration and outcomes. The shift comes as the retailer, which also owns Waitrose, tries to accelerate its turnaround after reporting a £21m loss last year. While maintaining a hybrid model, the company is exploring ways to expand office space to accommodate increased attendance.
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Human Times
Europe
Tesla will add 1,000 jobs at its Gruenheide gigafactory near Berlin by the end of June to raise weekly production by about 20% from the third quarter. The company said the hiring responds to stronger Model Y demand, with recruitment due to begin in May. Around 500 temporary workers are expected to become permanent employees this year, broadening the plant’s workforce of about 11,500 people. Tesla has also started seeking several hundred staff for battery cell production planned for the first half of 2027, a separate expansion at its only European gigafactory as the company works to strengthen output in a market where its share has been falling.
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Human Times
Middle East
Gulf women are increasingly shaping the development landscape in GCC countries, as highlighted in the GCC-Stat report. Employed females in the region rose from 5.7m in 2020 to 7.3m by 2025. Female labour force participation is projected to reach 39.3%, with a 10.5% unemployment rate. The report noted improvements in women's employment indicators, including an 8% rise in participation and a 26.1% drop in unemployment. Women play crucial roles in health, education, and tourism, with significant representation in nursing and teaching. The female population in the GCC is expected to grow to 22.9m by 2024.
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