The National - News

PayPal to lay off 2,000 employees amid ‘challengin­g period’

- MASSOUD A DERHALLY

Global payments company PayPal is laying off 2,000 employees, about 7 per cent of its workforce, as the technology industry continues to cut back on a hiring surge that began after the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The layoffs at the company, co-founded by billionair­e investor and activist Peter Thiel, were announced on Tuesday in a memo to staff by chief executive Dan Schulman.

“These reductions will occur over the coming weeks, with some organisati­ons impacted more than others,” Mr Schulman said. “Change can be difficult – particular­ly when it includes valued colleagues and friends departing. We will face this head-on together, drawing on the unparallel­ed scale of our global platform, the strategic investment­s we have made to strengthen our core capabiliti­es, and the trust and loyalty of our customers.”

Mr Schulman said the company had worked over the past year to adapt to “the challengin­g macroecono­mic environmen­t”.

Despite reducing its costs and recalibrat­ing resources to focus on core strategic priorities, it still needs to slash its headcount, he said.

PayPal’s shares closed 2.32 per cent up at $81.49 at the close of trading on Tuesday.

However, the company’s stock has declined about 54 per cent over the past year.

While the company reported strong third-quarter results last year, with revenue beating estimates to increase by 12 per cent to $6.85 billion, it reduced its annual revenue outlook due to an expected slowdown in spending in the US.

“This will be a challengin­g period for our community, but I am confident we will come through it together with compassion for each other, our values at the fore and a shared commitment to the future of PayPal,” he said.

The layoffs follow similar measures at Big Tech companies that have cut thousands of jobs amid rising interest rates aimed at reducing inflation and growing fears of a recession in the US.

After a hiring frenzy following the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, as a result of the switch to digitalisa­tion, companies such as Spotify, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, Twitter, IBM and Google’s parent Alphabet have fired thousands of employees.

Companies in the US let go of 363,824 jobs in 2022, 13 per cent more than in 2021, with the technology sector being the leading job-cutting industry last year, according to Chicago-based global employment company Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

A total of 97,171 jobs were cut in the technology sector last year, a 649 per cent increase from 2021 – the highest since the dot-com crash that began in 2000, a survey by the company showed.

This week, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund changed course and raised its global economic outlook estimate for the first time in a year, projecting that the world economy this year will expand by 2.9 per cent, 0.2 percentage points higher than the previous estimate.

The US, the world’s largest economy, is now set to avoid a recession and is projected to expand by 1.4 per cent this year, after growing by 2 per cent last year and 5.7 per cent in 2021.

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