
Audio By Carbonatix
Oracle shed about 21,000 roles globally in the last year as the US technology giant reshapes its business around artificial intelligence (AI), the firm's latest annual report shows.
The software and cloud computing firm says it had around 141,000 full-time employees as of 31 May 2026, down from about 162,000 workers at the same time last year.
The "deployment of AI technologies across our operations have resulted, and may continue to result, in reductions to our workforce," the report says.
The cuts, which amount to about 13% of Oracle's workforce, are part of a wider trend among tech firms as they spend hundreds of billions of dollars on building AI infrastructure like data centres.
Amazon and Facebook-owner Meta have cut thousands of job in recent months as they invest heavily in AI.
More than 100,000 tech workers have been laid off in the past year, according to estimates from employment tracking firms.
Oracle made "significant" job cuts in April, according to senior employees posting online, but the full extent of the layoffs had not been revealed until its annual report was filed.
The firm said the cuts have led to about $1.8bn (£1.36bn) in severance payments and other restructuring costs in the past year.
The sum is significantly higher than the $374m restructuring bill in the previous financial year.
Oracle said that its restructuring efforts "can be disruptive". It warned that the reorganisation may lead to a shortage in skilled workers in certain roles, resulting in a loss of productivity that could impact its earnings.
The BBC has contacted Oracle for further comment.
Oracle has been in a race to roll out data centres for AI giants like OpenAI and Meta.
The BBC previously reported that Oracle planned to spend at least $50bn on infrastructure this year.
The company was co-founded by Larry Ellison, one of the richest people in the world, who also serves as Oracle's chief technology officer.
Many companies have reduced their workforces - which is often a tech firm's biggest expense - as they invest in AI.
Google, Amazon and Meta collectively plan to pour some $650bn into technology this year.
Amazon said it plans to spend $200bn over the next year on AI investments, the most of any major tech company.
The e-commerce and tech giant, which employs more than 1.5 million people worldwide, also said it would cut about 30,000 jobs in several rounds of layoffs.
A senior executive at Amazon said in an internal note last October that the company needed to be organised "more leanly" because AI was "enabling companies to innovate much faster than ever before."
Latest Stories
-
Twins marry twins in joyous Nigerian joint wedding
6 seconds -
Start him or drop Him: The Jordan Ayew dilemma Queiroz cannot avoid
5 minutes -
Forms Capital Limited partners with Hack54 to advance digital finance innovation and youth empowerment
14 minutes -
UBA Ghana launches World Cup & Summer Travel campaign with exclusive 15% discounts on Brussels Airlines
22 minutes -
Adwoa Safo was target of assassination plot – Family Spokesperson alleges
1 hour -
NADMO appeals to Ibrahim Mahama to dredge rivers as flooding worsens in Samreboi
1 hour -
Speed up work – Contractors on Takoradi-Cape Coast highway dualisation told
1 hour -
BOST Energies refutes claims of fuel contamination at Kumasi Depot
1 hour -
NPP cautions constituency executive aspirants against cash payments as nominations open
1 hour -
Ghana can surpass $15bn in export earnings by 2030 – FAGE president
1 hour -
BoG demystifies central bank operations, exchange rates and reserves
1 hour -
NPP must engage Kennedy Agyapong through dialogue, says Kwadwo Poku Nsafoah
1 hour -
CARE Ghana calls for Ghana Card to become sole ID for voting
1 hour -
NPP opens constituency executive nominations
1 hour -
Vigilance, positive defiance key to environmental protection – Asiedu Nketia
1 hour