Tomorrow's tech news, today's hangover. (about)


Apr. 30, 2026

The Same Lie in Better Fonts



They called it “restructuring” at the post office too. Same word, different decade. One Monday there were forty of us sorting mail in the back. By Friday they had a new machine that did the work of fifteen men, and the supervisor called it “progress” while he avoided eye contact. I didn’t have an MBA then. I didn’t need one to understand what was happening. Nobody does.

Now it’s happening in India, only the numbers make the post office look like a rehearsal. Fifteen million people. That’s the size of a mid-sized country, working in call centers and IT parks in Bengaluru and Pune, doing the white-collar work that was supposed to be bulletproof. You got the degree. You learned Python. You worked the night shift answering emails for Americans who couldn’t be bothered to read the FAQ. And now a chatbot does it faster, cheaper, and it never asks for a bathroom break.

Oracle laid off ten thousand in March. Amazon cut five hundred in January. A banker told Reuters his India workforce could shrink by a third within two years. JPMorgan has fifty-five thousand people there. HSBC has forty-seven thousand. These are the kids who studied while their friends slept, who believed the knowledge economy was a ladder that only went up.

The economists call it “AI deflation.” Revenue at Tata Consultancy Services is shrinking for the first time since 2004. The government’s Economic Survey calls the change “a quiet, steady drift.” I keep returning to that phrase. Quiet. Steady. Drift. It sounds like fog. Like something you wake up inside of, slowly realizing you can’t see the shore anymore. That’s not what it is. What it is, is forty thousand people getting called into conference rooms on a Tuesday and being told their access badges don’t work anymore. What it is, is a father looking at his daughter’s school fees and understanding, in one cold moment, that he doesn’t know what he’s going to do. That’s not drift. That’s drowning with good branding.

India skipped manufacturing. Went straight from farms to service desks, and for a while the math worked. Eight million new workers enter the economy every year, and the call centers and coding shops absorbed them like a sponge. Now the sponge is being wrung out by people who’ve never worked a night shift in their lives.

I keep thinking about my uncle who worked at Bethlehem Steel for thirty years. He had a house, a boat, a pension he never worried about. Then the mills closed and they told him the future was in “information services.” Retrain, they said. Adapt. He was fifty-three. He knew how to read a blast furnace, not a spreadsheet. He died broke, not because he was lazy — he worked double shifts until the day they padlocked the gates — but because the world decided his work didn’t matter, and nobody asked him if he agreed.

The same language is being used now in India. Upskilling. Reskilling. Navigating the transition. It’s the same lie in better fonts. The new economy doesn’t want you. It wants the machine that replaced you, and it wants you to feel grateful for the chance to compete with it on uneven ground.

Here’s what the articles don’t say: these aren’t just jobs. They’re the anchor of an entire consumption economy built on the fiction that knowledge work was permanent. The top hundred and forty million Indians drive two-thirds of all discretionary spending. Cars. Homes. Weddings paid for with debt. The gig workers who serve them — cooks, cleaners, drivers — they all eat because that middle class has money to spend. You pull out fifteen million jobs and the whole thing wobbles. Then it falls. And it falls on people who never worked for Oracle or JPMorgan. It falls on the cook who doesn’t know what AI is, except that suddenly nobody’s ordering dinner anymore.

The numbers are staggering if you let them be. Seventy-five billion dollars in lost spending power. Household debt already surging — Indians spend thirteen percent of income just paying off loans, more than Americans or Chinese. Most of that debt isn’t for houses. It’s for smartphones, vacations, weddings. The things you buy when you believe tomorrow looks like today.

That banker said it could happen in one or two years. Two years. The same time it takes to fall in love, to forget a voice, to believe good times last. Five million people could slide from the consuming class into something nobody has a name for yet. The article calls it a nightmare. I’d call it Tuesday.

I don’t know what happens to fifteen million people when the work disappears. I know what happened to my uncle. I know what happened to the guys at the post office. You don’t “retrain” your way out of a world that decided you’re obsolete. You drink more. You yell at the television. You try not to think about the fact that your daughter’s degree — the one you paid for with loans you’re still carrying — qualifies her to do exactly the kind of work a chatbot just learned to do last Tuesday.

The executives making these decisions sit in rooms with names like “Global Capability Centres,” which is corporate poetry for “cheaper labor with good English.” They don’t see the faces. They see line items. They see “AI deflation” as a good thing because it means higher margins. They see progress.

My uncle saw progress too, once. He watched them install new furnaces that made the steel cleaner, faster, better. He thought it meant the mill would last forever. Six months later they closed it anyway, because somewhere else had even newer furnaces, and his didn’t matter anymore.

That’s the real pattern. Not that machines get better. We know that. The pattern is that every time, the people who get thrown away are told it’s their own fault for not keeping up. As if the game wasn’t rigged from the start. As if someone had asked them whether they wanted to play.


Source: Reuters - AI job shock risks throttling India’s consumption

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