Inside PayPal's Quiet Workforce Reset: AI Will Save $1.5B, But Who Pays the Price?
If you have been following corporate announcements lately, you would know that there is a phrase that keeps showing up. It goes something like: "We are taking deliberate steps to sharpen our strategy."
PayPal's new CEO, Enrique Lores, said almost exactly that on Tuesday when the company revealed it plans to save at least $1.5 billion over the next two to three years, largely by leaning into AI and cutting a significant portion of its workforce.
The announcement was clean and carefully worded. What it means for the thousands of people on PayPal's payroll is a whole, different conversation.
What PayPal Actually Announced
PayPal employs roughly 23,800 people. According to Bloomberg, the company is planning to cut around 20% of that number over the next two to three years, which translates to more than 4,500 jobs.
The cuts are designed to be gradual, phased in stages rather than dropped in one dramatic announcement, which is a very deliberate choice.
It gives the company room to frame the restructuring as a measured transformation rather than a crisis response.
The $1.5 billion in projected savings will come from two main levers. One, removing what the company calls "duplication and layers" from its organisational structure, two, accelerating AI adoption across its operations.
To manage the latter, PayPal has formed a dedicated "AI transformation and simplification" team. The company says it plans to reinvest the savings into improving the speed and interoperability of its products.
The Innovation Story and the Inconvenient Reality
PayPal has described its current moment as "becoming a technology company again." It is a bold claim for a company that already processes billions of dollars in transactions daily, but the framing is intentional.
It positions the layoffs and AI adoption as forward momentum. The uncomfortable truth is that $1.5 billion in savings does not appear from nowhere.
A significant portion of it comes from replacing human labour with automated processes, particularly in areas like customer service, fraud detection and transaction processing that currently employ real people.
The company has not been transparent about the precise breakdown, which makes it difficult to assess exactly how much of the savings is genuine innovation versus straightforward headcount reduction dressed in the language of transformation.
PayPal Is Not Alone
The same day PayPal made its announcement, Coinbase revealed it was cutting roughly 14% of its workforce, also citing AI as a key driver. Block, the payments company behind Cash App, made similar cuts in February.
Before them, Salesforce eliminated 4,000 customer support roles. Oracle laid off thousands while ramping up AI spending. Snap cut 16% of its staff.
Meta, which I have written about before, has been the most dramatic example of this trend. Since 2022, the company has eliminated approximately 25,000 positions across multiple rounds of layoffs, even as its revenues hit $201 billion in 2025, a year in which the company was clearly not in financial distress.
The cuts were about reallocating priorities, specifically redirecting salary budgets toward AI infrastructure spending.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg has set Meta's 2026 capital expenditure at between $115 billion and $135 billion, nearly double what the company spent in 2025.
Across the five largest U.S. tech and cloud companies — Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Oracle — the combined capital expenditure commitment for 2026 sits somewhere between $660 billion and $690 billion.
That money is going into data centres, GPUs and servers and not into hiring. As of early 2026, more than 92,000 tech workers had already been laid off.
The People Being Cut Are Not The People Being Hired
At the same time companies are announcing mass layoffs, there are approximately 275,000 AI-related job postings sitting open in the United States alone, with a 92% increase in AI-role hiring year-on-year.
The problem is that the workers being displaced are not the workers companies are trying to recruit.
Machine learning engineers, AI safety researchers, and data infrastructure specialists are in shortage. The laid-off and the in-demand are operating in entirely different skill universes.
What this creates is less a story about AI replacing jobs and more a story about AI being used as justification for repricing labour and cutting costs while the savings flow upward.
The Question No Press Release Will Answer
For young Africans watching the global fintech and tech landscape, this matters.
The digital payment infrastructure that companies like PayPal, Flutterwave and others have built sits on a foundation of human labour that is increasingly being treated as a line item to be optimised.
The "efficiency" logic that is clearing out PayPal's workforce today is the same logic that African tech employers are watching closely and, in many cases, already beginning to replicate.
The $1.5 billion will be saved. The question is just who is doing the saving, and who is absorbing the cost.
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