Apple is reportedly planning to slow hiring and spending growth next year to cope with an economic downturn, which would place it in the company of American tech companies including Facebook, Amazon and Google in enacting similar measures.
The changes, first reported by Bloomberg, would not affect all teams, and Apple is reportedly still planning a major product launch scheduled for next year that includes a mixed-reality headset, its first significant new category since the Apple Watch in 2015.
While Apple has not confirmed its plan to slow hiring, the report comes as earnings season enters full-swing. Late Tuesday, Netflix is expected to announce a sharp fall in subscribers, indicating in part that consumers are cutting back on discretionary spending as consumer confidence plummets in a highly inflationary environment.
Last week, Google announced it will slow down hiring for the remainder of the year. In a memo to employees, CEO Sundar Pichai said the company would have to “be more entrepreneurial” and for employees to work with “greater urgency, sharper focus, and more hunger than we’ve shown on sunnier days”.
Earlier, Microsoft said it planned to cut some jobs as it realigned business groups but overall expected to increase its headcount. “We will continue to invest in our business and grow headcount overall in the year ahead,” the company said.
Facebook parent Meta Platforms has also announced a hiring reduction in some high-level positions as it seeks to cut expenses by $3bn this year.
In June, it was reported that Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, had a “super bad feeling” about the US economy and was determined to cut about 10% of the auto company’s workforce and to “pause all hiring worldwide”.
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