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Ranked: U.S. Job Cuts by Industry in 2025

2025-11-21 02:35:58

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Job cuts by industry in 2025 reached almost 1.1 million, led by government, tech, and retail. Explore which sectors saw the biggest increases.

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Ranked: U.S. Job Cuts by Industry in 2025

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Employers announced almost 1.1 million job cuts through October 2025, the highest total since 2020.
  • Government, tech, warehousing, and retail saw the largest increases in layoffs, while aerospace, apparel, and transportation saw sharp declines.

The U.S. job market has shifted dramatically in 2025. Employers announced more than a million layoffs through October, up 65% from the same period last year. Much of the increase came from government reductions, including large DOGE-related cuts.

Meanwhile, sectors like tech, retail, and warehousing continued to shed workers at an accelerated pace. This visualization ranks the industries facing the largest job cuts so far this year. The data for this rank comes from Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

Government Layoffs Surged to Record Levels

Government job cuts jumped to more than 307,000, over eight times higher than the same period in 2024. A key driver was DOGE-related layoffs, which resulted in widespread workforce reductions. This made government the largest source of job cuts in 2025 by a wide margin.

Industry Job Cuts (YTD 2025) Same period, 2024
Government 307,638 37,746
Technology 141,159 120,470
Warehousing 90,418 18,904
Retail 88,664 36,136
Services 63,580 39,296
Financial 48,968 38,625
Health Care/Products 44,256 44,816
Consumer Products 41,033 33,865
Non-Profit 27,651 5,329
Food 27,457 24,729
Automotive 26,149 34,314
Pharmaceutical 24,689 12,751
Telecommunications 22,896 10,280
Entertainment/Leisure 22,132 32,087
Education 20,013 26,466
Media 16,680 13,279
Industrial Goods 16,656 20,616
Transportation 15,544 25,739
Energy 15,161 9,702
Electronics 7,112 3,360
Construction 7,032 10,925
Insurance 5,324 5,990
Apparel 3,751 8,016
Aerospace/Defense 3,278 29,526
Utility 2,872 8,963
Chemical 2,800 1,588
Mining 2,526 1,373
FinTech 1,864 5,054
Real Estate 1,795 4,692
Legal 403 202
Total 1,099,500 664,839

Tech, Warehousing, and Retail Continued Their Downturn

The tech sector announced over 141,000 layoffs, extending a multi-year correction driven by restructuring, automation, and slower hiring pipelines. Warehousing recorded one of the steepest increases year over year, rising from 18,900 cuts in 2024 to more than 90,000 in 2025. Retail also saw layoffs more than double.

Several Industries Saw Major Declines in Job Cuts

Not all sectors faced worsening conditions. Aerospace and defense layoffs fell sharply from roughly 29,500 last year to just over 3,200 in 2025. Transportation and apparel also saw significant declines. The improvement in these areas suggests stabilization after several years of turbulence, including Boeing’s 2024 layoff announcement of 2,500 U.S. workers.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Visualizing the Cost of the U.S. Government Shutdown on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

4 Things Investors Need to Know About AI

2025-11-21 00:32:01

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The following content is sponsored by New York Life Investments

4 Things Investors Need to Know About AI

Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming nearly every part of the global economy, from automating everyday digital tasks to enabling life-saving surgical procedures. As adoption accelerates, investors are asking the same question: where are the biggest opportunities?

This visualization, created in partnership with New York Life Investments, explores four key things investors need to know about AI and how to invest around it.  

1. Who Are the AI Leaders?

Hundreds of AI models have emerged across the globe. However, a smaller group of companies is driving the majority of real-world deployment and innovation. Understanding who leads the AI race helps investors identify the firms best positioned to capture value.

Leading the pack by number of large-scale AI models developed are Google (18 models), Meta (14), and OpenAI (10), the creator of ChatGPT

Company Total
Google 18
Meta 14
OpenAI 10
Anthropic 9
Alibaba 6
DeepMind 6
NVIDIA 5
Mistral AI 4
Tsinghua 4
BAAI 4
Hugging Face 4

Developing these cutting-edge AI systems requires billions in annual R&D spending, as companies around the world pour capital into the next wave of AI breakthroughs.

2. How Much Is Invested in AI on a Global Scale?

In 2024, global artificial intelligence investment reached $252 billion, reflecting a rebound in enthusiasm after recent market volatility. While this is below the $361 billion peak in 2021, renewed momentum, particularly in the U.S. and Europe, signals AI’s return as a major driver of global innovation. Corporate investment, venture funding, and government spending are converging to accelerate adoption across sectors from healthcare to manufacturing.

Year Private Investment ($ billions)
2017 53.7
2018 79.6
2019 103.3
2020 221.9
2021 360.7
2022 253.3
2023 201.0
2024 252.3

Financial resources are only part of the story. AI’s explosive growth also requires enormous amounts of electricity, water, and data center capacity.

3. How Much Power Demand Is AI-Driven?

AI workloads are becoming one of the fastest-growing sources of electricity demand worldwide. Data centers consume vast volumes of energy and water to operate and cool their systems. By 2030, artificial intelligence-related data center requirements could nearly triple, significantly reshaping regional power markets and stressing global infrastructure.

Year Share of total U.S. power demand (%)
2023 3.7
2024 4.3
2025P 5.2
2026P 6.5
2027P 8.0
2028P 9.3
2029P 10.3
2030P 11.7

The technology’s data boom is straining power systems. This is creating major investment opportunities in energy, cooling, and data infrastructure.

With capital, innovation, and infrastructure needs rising rapidly, investors are increasingly looking at performance metrics to see where the strongest returns are emerging.

4. How Did Data Center REITs Perform in 2024?

Riding the wave of AI-driven infrastructure demand, data center REITs surged 25.2% in 2024. This sector dramatically outperformed the broader REIT sector’s 4.9% gain. 

Sector Performance, 2024 (%)
Data Centers 25.2
Healthcare 24.2
Office 21.5
Retail 14.0
Residential 12.8
FTSE Nareit All Equity REITs (average) 4.9
Self Storage -0.5
Lodging/Resorts -2.0
Diversified -10.0
Industrial -17.8

As hyperscalers, cloud providers, and artificial intelligence companies expand their compute capacity, these REITs have become essential assets in the digital economy.

Investing to Power the Future

Artificial intelligence is reshaping everything from productivity and innovation to energy grids and global competition. For investors, the key is understanding how the technology aligns with long-term themes such as infrastructure modernization, enterprise digital transformation, and the rise of intelligent automation. Those who position early could benefit from the structural changes AI is driving across industries.

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Ranked: World’s Most Expensive Condo Markets in 2025

2025-11-20 23:37:27

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Map exploring the world’s most expensive condo markets in 2025

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Ranked: World’s Most Expensive Condo Markets in 2025

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Five Swiss cities rank in the global top 10: Zurich, Geneva, Lausanne, Bern, and Basel.
  • Hong Kong tops the list at roughly $25,339 per square meter, followed by Zurich and Lausanne.
  • Singapore (#4) and Seoul (#7) are Asia’s other major entries in the top 10.
  • New York is the only U.S. city to appear, ranking #11.

Condo prices in the world’s top urban markets remain sky-high in 2025, reflecting the global trend toward urban density, luxury demand, and limited housing supply.

According to the latest cost-of-living data, the most expensive places to buy an apartment are clustered in a few high-income regions, most notably Switzerland and East Asia.

The data for this ranking comes from Numbeo, a crowd-sourced global cost-of-living database. It compares average prices per square meter (in U.S. dollars) for apartments in city centers worldwide.

Hong Kong Remains the World’s Costliest Market

Hong Kong maintains its long-standing lead with condos averaging around $25,339 per square meter. Despite recent economic challenges, the city’s limited land, high population density, and enduring appeal as a financial hub continue to drive prices to extreme levels. Singapore, Asia’s other major real estate hotspot, ranks fourth with prices exceeding $22,000 per square meter.

Rank City Price per Square Meter
1 🇭🇰 Hong Kong (China) $25.3K
2 🇨🇭 Zurich, Switzerland $24.8K
3 🇨🇭 Lausanne, Switzerland $22.9K
4 🇸🇬 Singapore, Singapore $22.5K
5 🇨🇭 Bern, Switzerland $22.2K
6 🇨🇭 Geneva, Switzerland $21.8K
7 🇰🇷 Seoul, South Korea $21.6K
8 🇨🇭 Basel, Switzerland $20.9K
9 🇮🇱 Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel $19.8K
10 🇬🇧 London, United Kingdom $19.7K
11 🇺🇸 New York, U.S. $16.1K
12 🇨🇳 Shanghai, China $14.8K
13 🇨🇳 Beijing, China $14.7K
14 🇹🇼 Taipei, Taiwan $14.4K
15 🇫🇷 Paris, France $13.7K
16 🇩🇪 Munich, Germany $13.1K
17 🇨🇳 Shenzhen, China $12.3K
18 🇦🇺 Sydney, Australia $12.1K
19 🇱🇺 Luxembourg, Luxembourg $12.1K
20 🇸🇪 Stockholm, Sweden $11.8K

Switzerland Dominates Europe’s High-End Housing

Switzerland stands out with five cities appearing in the global top 10. Zurich ranks second overall at $24,758 per square meter, while Lausanne and Bern follow closely behind.

These prices reflect Switzerland’s combination of financial stability, strong currency, and limited developable land in urban centers.

North America and Other Markets Lag Behind

Despite its reputation for high property costs, the United States makes only a single appearance in the top 20: New York City at #11. At $16,104 per square meter, it trails markets in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.

Meanwhile, cities like Tel Aviv, Munich, and Sydney remain high-value real estate markets in their respective regions. The lowest in the top 20, Stockholm, still averages more than $11,000 per square meter.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Where’s the World Heading in 2026? on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Ranked: Productivity of the World’s Largest 30 Economies (2005-2025)

2025-11-20 21:07:45

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Chart showing how productivity has changed across the 30 largest economies between 2005 and 2025.

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Productivity of the World’s Largest 30 Economies (2005-2025)

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • China’s productivity has surged by about 340% since 2005, driven by rapid industrial upgrades and investment in technology. However, growth has slowed in recent years.
  • Ireland’s productivity appears high due to a tax system that lets global tech and pharma firms book profits and intellectual property earnings in the country, even though most of the money goes back to their parent companies.
  • Saudi Arabia’s productivity has declined over the past two decades, mainly due to lower oil prices in the mid-2010s and OPEC+ production cuts that limited output. Non-oil sectors are growing, but the economy still depends heavily on hydrocarbons.

Economic productivity, measured by the value of goods and services produced per hour worked, is a key indicator of efficiency and overall prosperity.

This chart ranks the world’s 30 largest economies by GDP per hour worked (in U.S. dollars), revealing where output has grown or stagnated over the past two decades.

While advanced economies tend to dominate the top of the list, some emerging markets have seen extraordinary gains as they industrialize and integrate into global supply chains. The data for this visualization comes from the International Labour Organization (ILO).

Ireland’s Exceptional Productivity Surge

Ireland tops the ranking for productivity growth, with output per hour rising from $68.8 in 2005 to $139.1 in 2025—a 102% increase. However, much of this is statistical, not structural.

The presence of global tech and pharmaceutical giants like Apple, Google, and Pfizer inflates Ireland’s GDP figures through profit-shifting and intellectual property accounting.

China’s Growth Story Slows but Stays Strong

China’s productivity has increased from $4.5 per hour in 2005 to $19.8 in 2025, up more than 340%. The early 2010s brought massive efficiency gains as factories modernized, infrastructure expanded, and manufacturing became more sophisticated.

Rank Country 2005 2015 2025
1 🇮🇪 Ireland $68.8 $106.6 $139.1
2 🇳🇴 Norway $108.6 $113.6 $123.6
3 🇧🇪 Belgium $81.5 $85.4 $91.6
4 🇳🇱 Netherlands $78.1 $85.1 $90.4
5 🇸🇪 Sweden $71.4 $79.9 $85.7
6 🇨🇭 Switzerland $70.3 $77.9 $85.4
7 🇫🇷 France $72.3 $78.2 $82.2
8 🇺🇸 U.S. $63.2 $70.1 $81.8
9 🇩🇪 Germany $66.3 $73.7 $80.5
10 🇳🇱 Italy $73.1 $74.2 $74.4
11 🇬🇧 UK $63.2 $66.1 $69.5
12 🇦🇺 Australia $58.0 $66.1 $69.2
13 🇪🇸 Spain $53.7 $61.4 $67.9
14 🇹🇼 Taiwan $38.5 $49.6 $67.4
15 🇨🇦 Canada $57.5 $62.8 $67.0
16 🇮🇱 Israel $45.3 $51.5 $60.8
17 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia $85.6 $62.5 $56.6
18 🇯🇵 Japan $46.6 $50.6 $53.7
19 🇰🇷 South Korea $26.7 $36.4 $49.6
20 🇵🇱 Poland $28.8 $36.8 $48.8
21 🇷🇺 Russia $29.0 $36.8 $44.3
22 🇦🇪 UAE $55.8 $40.6 $43.0
23 🇹🇷 Türkiye $22.2 $31.3 $40.2
24 🇦🇷 Argentina $29.3 $36.6 $33.4
25 🇲🇽 Mexico $21.4 $23.6 $22.4
26 🇧🇷 Brazil $16.9 $20.3 $22.0
27 🇹🇭 Thailand $10.7 $14.9 $18.5
28 🇨🇳 China $4.5 $11.1 $19.8
29 🇮🇩 Indonesia $8.3 $11.5 $15.7
30 🇮🇳 India $4.3 $7.2 $10.7

However, growth has slowed in recent years. As wages rise and manufacturing matures, further productivity improvements increasingly depend on automation, AI integration, and service-sector innovation.

Oil Economies Show Mixed Trends

Productivity in Saudi Arabia has fallen from $85.6 in 2005 to $56.6 in 2025. The decline reflects both falling oil prices during the 2010s and OPEC+ production caps that curbed output. While diversification efforts under Vision 2030 are expanding non-oil industries, hydrocarbons still dominate the economy.

By contrast, Norway, another resource-rich economy, maintains one of the world’s highest productivity levels at $123.6 per hour, thanks to strong governance, sovereign wealth reinvestment, and a highly skilled workforce.

The U.S., Germany, and France have all seen consistent gains. The U.S. rose from $63.2 to $81.8, Germany from $66.3 to $80.5, and France from $72.3 to $82.2 over the 20-year span.

Western Europe continues to outperform on efficiency thanks to automation and worker training, while Japan and the UK have grown more slowly due to aging populations and stagnant investment.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out How Quality of Life Has Changed in 30 Countries, According to Citizens on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Inflation Watch: Countries Losing the Most Purchasing Power in 2025

2025-11-20 02:23:17

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The following content is sponsored by Plasma

Inflation Watch: Countries Losing Purchasing Power in 2025

Key Takeaways

  • When inflation is high, money stops holding its value and turns into a melting asset instead.
  • In Venezuela, the purchasing power of $100 could drop to just $15 by the end of 2025.

Imagine earning $100 in January, only to have it buy less than $80 worth of goods or services by December. That’s how fast inflation is eating away at purchasing power in some countries.

This graphic, created in partnership with Plasma, highlights countries with the highest inflation rates and what $100 could be worth by the end of 2025. It’s part of our Money 2.0 series, where we highlight how finance is evolving into its next era. 

The Declining Value of $100 Due to Inflation

Some countries are facing high inflation rates, which means that prices are rising very quickly. As prices rise, money you already hold will buy you less than it did before.

What does this look like in dollar terms? Using projected 2025 inflation rates from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), we estimated what the equivalent of $100 at the start of the year will be worth by the end of 2025.

Country Purchasing Power of $100 by End of 2025
🇻🇪 Venezuela $15
🇸🇩 Sudan $67
🇮🇷 Iran $69
🇹🇷 Türkiye $76
🇾🇪 Yemen $76
🇿🇼 Zimbabwe $77
🇲🇲 Myanmar $77
🇭🇹 Haiti $77
🇧🇮 Burundi $77
🇦🇷 Argentina $78

Source: IMF World Economic Outlook, Oct. 2025.

The IMF expects Venezuela will have an inflation rate of nearly 549% in 2025. In practical terms, this means $100 saved at the start of the year would only buy goods worth $15 by December. Economic sanctions from the U.S. have worsened the financial crisis in the country. 

Even outside this extreme example, many countries are on track to see the local currency lose about a quarter of its purchasing power over the course of the year. This means wages and savings lose value quickly, making everyday essentials like food and rent harder to afford.

How to Protect Purchasing Power

When local money is rapidly losing purchasing power, residents can move their savings into a currency experiencing much lower inflation and more stability.

For instance, stablecoins are primarily pegged to the U.S. dollar and can help people preserve the value of their money. With Plasma One, a global U.S. dollar card, people can quickly sign up on their phone and use their stablecoin balance in more than 150 countries.

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Forecast: When Companies Will Reach $5 Trillion in Market Cap

2025-11-20 01:11:27

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Graphic showing when the next companies could hit a $5T market cap

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When Companies Will Reach $5 Trillion in Market Cap

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Data from BestBrokers.com estimates when the next $5 trillion companies will emerge, based on their historical 3-year average growth rates.
  • If these estimates hold up, Microsoft could be the next company to hit the $5T milestone, followed shortly after by Alphabet.

After Nvidia became the world’s first $5 trillion dollar company in October 2025, investors are left wondering which tech giant will reach the milestone next.

To find out, we’ve visualized forecasts that estimate when various companies could reach a $5 trillion market cap based on historical growth trends.

Data & Discussion

The analysis from BestBrokers.com is based on each company’s 3-year average growth rate.

It projects that Microsoft and Alphabet could reach $5 trillion sometime in the second half of 2026, while others, including Apple and Meta, could follow in 2027.

Company Market Cap 3-Year Average
Growth Rate
Estimated Date
to Reach
NVIDIA $4,970,000,000,000 163% Reached on
Oct. 29
Microsoft $3,940,000,000,000 32% Aug 18, 2026
Alphabet $3,450,000,000,000 43% Oct 25, 2026
Apple $4,030,000,000,000 18% Jan 14, 2027
Broadcom $1,780,000,000,000 112% Feb 20, 2027
Meta $1,680,000,000,000 97% May 19, 2027
TSMC $1,580,000,000,000 77% Oct 13, 2027
Amazon $2,400,000,000,000 32% May 27, 2028
Tesla $1,510,000,000,000 33% Dec 26, 2029
Oracle $765,970,000,000 56% Jan 1, 2030

Hyperscalers Could Hit $5 Trillion Soon

Microsoft is expected to be the next company to reach $5 trillion if its 3-year average growth rate of 32% continues. While Microsoft generates a majority of its revenue from cloud services, other segments like gaming are growing at an impressive pace.

Alphabet, which has an average annual growth rate of 43% over the past 3 years, could follow soon after. Google’s flagship ad business continues to drive massive revenue, allowing the company to pour billions into its AI initiatives.

Alphabet shares have also received a boost after Berkshire Hathaway revealed its $4.9 billion stake in the company.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out The World’s Largest Companies by Revenue on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.