Close Menu
Tech News VisionTech News Vision
  • Home
  • What’s On
  • Mobile
  • Computers
  • Gadgets
  • Apps
  • Gaming
  • How To
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending Now
Game of Thrones’ Emilia Clarke Thought She’d Die on Live TV After Having ‘Cheated Death’ With Brain Aneurysms

Game of Thrones’ Emilia Clarke Thought She’d Die on Live TV After Having ‘Cheated Death’ With Brain Aneurysms

15 May 2026
PMOS and pitfalls of personalized health

PMOS and pitfalls of personalized health

15 May 2026
Best Early Memorial Day Deals: Garmin, Birdfy, Breville (2026)

Best Early Memorial Day Deals: Garmin, Birdfy, Breville (2026)

15 May 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest VKontakte
Tech News VisionTech News Vision
  • Home
  • What’s On
  • Mobile
  • Computers
  • Gadgets
  • Apps
  • Gaming
  • How To
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Tech News VisionTech News Vision
Home » Companies Keep Slashing Employees’ Benefits for the Worst Reasons
What's On

Companies Keep Slashing Employees’ Benefits for the Worst Reasons

News RoomBy News Room15 May 2026Updated:15 May 2026No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Companies Keep Slashing Employees’ Benefits for the Worst Reasons

Employee benefits are in the spotlight this week, and that’s because of three recent stories about US companies cutting back on non-wage compensations for workers.

A Texas tech consulting firm with a forgettable name—TTEC—suddenly became a lot more memorable when it suspended its discretionary 401(k) match program for 16,000 employees through at least the end of 2026. According to Business Insider, which viewed an internal TTEC memo, the company plans to invest in AI certifications, AI tools and training, and automation, among other things.

The auditing and consulting giant Deloitte is also reportedly slashing benefits for some workers starting next year. This includes reducing PTO, halving parental leave, and eliminating a $50,000 reimbursement for family planning services such as adoption, surrogacy, and IVF. San Francisco-based Zoom, meanwhile, has made a smaller-scale change and reduced its parental leave for employees from 22 weeks to 18 weeks for birthing parents.

So what’s the driving force behind this? And are there more cuts to come? The latter is impossible to answer, and the former is unfortunately more complicated than “corporate ghouls go AI.”

First off, “what Deloitte did is completely unconscionable,’” says Joan C. Williams, a professor at UC Law San Francisco, the author of several books on work culture and class dynamics, and an oft-cited scholar on these topics. The consulting firm is cutting the benefits of a specific class of internal workers—in admin, IT support, and finance—while leaving intact benefits for people in client-facing roles. An affected worker will see their parental leave cut from 16 weeks to just eight weeks.

“It treats people differently based on the type of job they’re in, and cutting any mother down to eight weeks of paid leave is just outlandish,” Williams says. “When labor is tight, employers are more generous. But once the power shifts, the benefits contract.”

AI certainly is a convenient excuse these days for any corporate decision that harms workers. But the impetus here is also the cost of the benefits themselves. Earlier this year subsidies from the Affordable Care Act lapsed, and people began dropping out of health care plans entirely. Insurers have cited this as one reason they’ve raised premiums.

Sarahjane Sacchetti, a former top executive at benefits administration companies Cleo and Collective Health, who is working on a new health care initiative, told me that the costs of employer-sponsored health plans have increased significantly over the past five years. A survey last year of over 1,700 US employers by the Mercer health care consulting group found that the health care cost per worker was expected to rise on average 6.5 percent in 2026, the highest since 2010. And this was after factoring in cost-reduction measures; otherwise, the cost of a plan would go up by nearly 9 percent.

“This just starts to eat into how you think about total compensation as an employer,” Sacchetti says. That doesn’t mean the corporation is the ‘good guy,’ she says, but the poor state of American health care policy and lack of safety net are responsible for a lot of the stress that plagues undercompensated or laid-off workers.

Williams points out that the US is one of the few countries that doesn’t offer a federal paid maternal leave—putting it in league with Papua New Guinea and Suriname. “This just shows how crazy it is to provide employee basics like pension and paid parental leave through private employers rather than how other industrialized countries do it,” Williams says. Her proposed solution? “The US needs to join the rest of the universe.”

The irony, of course, is that the US government professes to be obsessed with women having more babies. If women in the US are—as celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz put it this week in the Oval Office—“underbabied,” a comprehensive paid federal leave policy would be the obvious place to start. (Oz also said that “making babies” is “the most creative thing the universe knows.” Don’t tell the AI CEOs.)

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

OpenAI now wants ChatGPT to access your bank accounts

OpenAI now wants ChatGPT to access your bank accounts

15 May 2026
The 5 Best Outdoor Griddles and Flat Top Grills (2026)

The 5 Best Outdoor Griddles and Flat Top Grills (2026)

15 May 2026
X is fighting Andrew Tate’s attempt to unmask his critics

X is fighting Andrew Tate’s attempt to unmask his critics

15 May 2026
PMOS and pitfalls of personalized health

PMOS and pitfalls of personalized health

15 May 2026
Editors Picks
The 5 Best Outdoor Griddles and Flat Top Grills (2026)

The 5 Best Outdoor Griddles and Flat Top Grills (2026)

15 May 2026
Lego 2K Drive to be Delisted

Lego 2K Drive to be Delisted

15 May 2026
X is fighting Andrew Tate’s attempt to unmask his critics

X is fighting Andrew Tate’s attempt to unmask his critics

15 May 2026
Companies Keep Slashing Employees’ Benefits for the Worst Reasons

Companies Keep Slashing Employees’ Benefits for the Worst Reasons

15 May 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending Now
Tech News Vision
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2026 Tech News Vision. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.