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Ranked: Which Tech Companies Cut the Most Jobs?

2026-04-03 00:37:01

See more visuals like this on the Voronoi app.

An illustrated ranking of 20 tech companies by disclosed layoffs in 2025 and 2026 year to date, led by Amazon, Intel, and Microsoft.

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Ranked: Which Tech Companies Cut the Most Jobs?

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

  • Amazon leads all companies with 30,184 disclosed layoffs across 2025 and 2026 to date.
  • Intel (27,058) and Microsoft (15,347) rank second and third, far ahead of the rest.
  • Just three companies account for roughly 64% of all layoffs shown in the ranking.

Layoffs in tech are increasingly concentrated among a handful of giant companies. Amazon, Intel, and Microsoft alone dominate this ranking, far outpacing the rest of the industry.

While the pace of layoffs has slowed from earlier peaks, companies are still trimming headcount as they balance profitability, slower growth, and increased investment in AI.

This visualization ranks the 15 tech companies that have cut the most jobs across 2025 and 2026 as of March 16, based on data from Layoffs.fyi.

Amazon Leads With Over 30,000 Layoffs

Amazon leads the ranking with 30,184 disclosed layoffs, followed by Intel at 27,058 and Microsoft at 15,347. Together, these three companies account for nearly two-thirds of all layoffs shown.

The data table below shows the top 15 companies by disclosed layoffs in 2025 and 2026 as of March 16, 2026:

Rank Company Disclosed Layoffs in 2025 and 2026
1 Amazon 30,184
2 Intel 27,058
3 Microsoft 15,347
4 HP 8,000
5 Meta 5,800
6 Salesforce 5,385
7 Block 4,931
8 Northvolt 2,800
9 Hewlett Packard Enterprise 2,552
10 Autodesk 2,350
11 Workday 2,150
12 Synopsys 2,000
13 WiseTech 2,000
14 Atlassian 1,950
15 ASML 1,700

Since 2020, Amazon has disclosed layoffs of around 58,000 employees. While this is more than many companies’ entire workforce, for Amazon it represents less than 4% of its 1.56 million employees.

The next major Big Tech company on the list is Meta with 5,800 disclosed layoffs, and reports note that the company is eyeing additional 2026 cuts that could reduce headcount by 20%.

Why Big Tech Is Still Cutting Jobs

Many of the largest tech layoffs in 2025 and 2026 reflect a similar set of pressures: slower growth, tighter cost controls, and increased investment in AI.

Some companies have been explicit about AI’s role. Block, for example, cut nearly half its workforce in 2026 with 4,000 layoffs, as CEO Jack Dorsey pointed to AI automation as a driver of a broader, one-time reorganization instead of smaller, ongoing cuts. Following his announcement, the company’s share price rose more than 20% in a single day.

In other cases, companies have emphasized structural changes rather than AI directly. At Amazon, January 2026 layoffs were part of efforts to reduce management layers, streamline decision-making, and reallocate resources toward priority areas, while continuing to hire in select roles.

Intel, meanwhile, tied its cuts to a broader multiyear turnaround. The company said it aims to align its cost structure with a new operating model, pursue $10 billion in 2025 cost savings, and simplify operations amid ongoing margin pressure.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check the world’s fastest growing jobs on Voronoi.

Countries Losing Trust in the U.S.

2026-04-02 23:31:00

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The following content is sponsored by Inigo

Countries Losing Trust in the U.S.

   

Key Takeaways

  • Trust in the United States has declined across all surveyed G7 and BRICs countries, with Canada showing the steepest drop at -52%.
  •        
  • Major European allies including Italy, France, and Germany report declines between -15% and -21%.
  •        
  • Public support for higher defense spending is rising in Europe, with 43% in France and 32% in Germany.
  •        

Global perceptions of the United States are shifting. Data from the Munich Security Conference shows a clear decline in trust across advanced and emerging economies.

This visualization, created in partnership with Inigo, provides visual context to these shifting perceptions and highlights where sentiment is changing fastest. These shifts reflect a broader reassessment of alliances in a more uncertain world.

Declining Trust Across Allies

Among traditional allies, the drop in trust is sharp. Canada records the steepest decline at -52%. Italy follows at -21%. France stands at -17%.

Country Trust in the United States (% change in perception)
United Kingdom -13
Italy -21
France -17
Japan -16
Brazil -20
India -10
Canada -52
Germany -15
South Africa -21
China -9

Germany and Japan also show meaningful declines at -15% and -16%. The United Kingdom is down -13%. These are not isolated moves. They point to weakening confidence across long-standing partnerships.

Policy uncertainty is one key driver. Shifting trade positions and tariff threats have strained economic relationships. Rhetoric around territorial expansion has also raised concerns, including proposals to annex Greenland and suggestions that Canada could become the 51st state.

At the same time, security concerns are rising across Europe. A January 2026 Eurobarometer poll shows 43% of respondents in France and 32% in Germany support higher defense spending. This suggests allies are preparing for a more uncertain security environment.

Emerging Economies Reflect Similar Trends

The pattern extends beyond Western allies. Brazil and South Africa both decline by more than -20%. India and China show smaller but still negative shifts at -10% and -9%.

This suggests a broad reset in global sentiment. It is not driven by one region alone. Strategic uncertainty is rising across markets.

A Rocky Road Ahead

The data points to a more fragmented global landscape. Trust in the United States is declining across multiple regions. At the same time, countries are preparing for greater uncertainty.

Rising defense support in Europe reinforces this shift. Public sentiment is signaling change. Global alliances may be entering a new phase.

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Ranked: The U.S. States Building the Most Data Centers

2026-04-02 22:19:59

See more visuals like this on the Voronoi app.

This chart shows current and planned data centers by U.S. state

Use This Visualization

Ranked: The U.S. States Building the Most Data Centers

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

  • Texas is projected to become the largest data center hub in the U.S., with 962 total sites in the pipeline.
  • Virginia leads today but is expected to fall to second as new projects come online.
  • Georgia is emerging as a breakout hub, with announced projects exceeding its current footprint by over 5x.

Data center construction is accelerating across the U.S. as demand for AI, cloud computing, and digital services continues to climb.

This surge is shifting where new infrastructure gets built—and which states are poised to dominate in the years ahead.

This graphic ranks states by their total pipeline of data centers, including operational sites, projects under construction, and announced developments. The data comes from Aterio, as of March 2026.

Texas Is Set to Overtake Virginia in Data Centers

Texas is on track to surpass Virginia as the top U.S. data center hub, with a projected 962 total sites across operational, under-construction, and announced projects.

Currently, Texas has just 212 operating data centers and 140 under construction.

The data table below shows the number of current, in construction, and announced data centers in each U.S. state:

State Operational Under construction Announced Total Data Centers
Texas 212 140 610 962
Virginia 320 136 498 954
Georgia 62 56 340 458
Pennsylvania 37 11 209 257
Arizona 83 35 136 254
Ohio 101 51 98 250
Illinois 78 19 153 250
California 166 6 40 212
Utah 29 10 117 156
Oregon 97 14 33 144
Nevada 27 29 75 134
New York 50 3 72 125
Indiana 28 23 69 120
Iowa 58 15 38 111
Washington 71 3 26 100
North Carolina 43 12 40 95
Minnesota 27 4 45 76
New Mexico 13 5 52 70
Missouri 24 8 37 69
Florida 53 2 12 67
Oklahoma 22 9 34 65
Alabama 15 8 36 59
Wisconsin 18 12 28 58
New Jersey 49 2 6 57
Michigan 31 1 21 53
Mississippi 10 21 19 50
Colorado 31 6 10 47
Kentucky 10 2 34 46
Wyoming 12 8 25 45
West Virginia 4 0 39 43
Connecticut 7 0 33 40
Nebraska 26 5 8 39
South Carolina 18 12 8 38
Tennessee 31 3 3 37
Louisiana 10 11 16 37
Maryland 12 12 10 34
Massachusetts 23 0 0 23
Kansas 8 1 11 20
Arkansas 4 2 12 18
Montana 4 0 11 15
North Dakota 2 4 8 14
Idaho 4 2 6 12
Maine 4 0 7 11
Delaware 6 0 3 9
South Dakota 2 0 6 8
New Hampshire 6 0 0 6
District Of Columbia 5 0 0 5
Rhode Island 3 0 0 3
Hawaii 2 0 0 2
Vermont 1 0 0 1

Knocked to the second spot, Virginia would be home to 954 data centers. It currently has 320 operational sites and 136 under construction.

Aterio categorizes projects as announced when there is a building permit, utility filing, or public announcement for a data center that hasn’t yet broken ground. When it does, the company swaps the project to under construction.

It takes around two years to build such a facility, though this is highly dependent on the size, chosen site, and permitting.

Data Center Growth in Other U.S. States

While Texas and Virginia are miles ahead of others on both current and prospective data centers, the rankings of states beneath them are set to change substantially.

California and Ohio are the only two other states that have operational data centers topping 100, at 166 and 101, respectively. However, California looks to be in eighth place for the most future data centers, with a total of 212. Ohio would be number six, at 250 data centers.

Georgia is emerging as one of the fastest-growing data center hubs in the country. Its pipeline of 340 announced projects alone is more than five times its current number of operational facilities. Pennsylvania will also experience skyrocketing growth, at 594.6%, as it moves from 37 data centers to a possible 257.

New Hampshire, the District Of Columbia, Rhode Island, Hawaii and Vermont each have no data centers under construction or announced.

Interestingly, Vermont and New Hampshire are among the 11 states that are considering a moratorium or restrictions on the construction of new data centers. Vermont currently has just one operational data center, while New Hampshire has six.

How Energy Access Influences Location

Access to power is becoming the biggest constraint on data center expansion, increasingly determining which states can support new development. As the best sites are snapped up and the data center industry shows few signs of slowing, developers will be forced to look at different locations.

To work around power constraints, some developers are securing dedicated energy sources or co-locating new generation alongside data centers—further shaping where future hubs can emerge.

Disused industrial sites that already have a connection to the grid are also catching the eyes of developers, as they can bypass some of these challenges.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about the data center build out, check out this graphic which shows global data center demand by region.

Half of U.S. Exports Come From Just 6 States

2026-04-02 20:05:59

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Voronoi showing each state's share of U.S. exports in 2025.

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Half of U.S. Exports Come From Just 6 States

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

  • Six states make up more than half of U.S. exports in 2025.
  • Texas is the clear leader, accounting for 21.8% of the total.
  • Meanwhile, 27 states each contribute less than 1%.

America’s export economy is far more concentrated than one would expect.

In 2025, just six states—Texas, California, New York, Louisiana, Illinois, and Florida—accounted for over half of all U.S. exports. Together, they generated roughly $1 trillion in trade, out of a $2.1 trillion total.

Texas stands far above the rest. The state alone makes up 21.8% of U.S. exports, meaning more than one in every five export dollars originates there.

Using the latest data from the U.S. Census Bureau, this chart shows how export activity is heavily concentrated across a small group of states, with most contributing only a fraction of the total.

Texas Exports More Than Entire Countries

With $450 billion in goods exports in 2025, Texas surpasses major global economies, including India ($445 billion) and Russia ($419 billion).

Despite a slight 1% annual decline, Texas exports have surged 81% over the past decade, driven largely by energy and industrial output. This highlights how a single U.S. state plays an outsized role not just nationally, but globally.

The table below shows how Texas’s scale of exports compare to the rest of America:

Rank State Share of Total Value Change
2024-2025
1 Texas 21.8% $450.3B -1%
2 California 9.1% $188.4B 2%
3 New York 7.4% $153.1B 63%
4 Louisiana 4.5% $93.4B 8%
5 Illinois 3.9% $80.0B -2%
6 Florida 3.8% $78.9B 9%
7 Indiana 3.3% $68.8B 14%
8 Washington 3.2% $65.3B 13%
9 Georgia 2.9% $60.3B 13%
10 Michigan 2.8% $58.3B -7%
11 Ohio 2.7% $55.9B -3%
12 Pennsylvania 2.5% $52.2B -2%
13 Kentucky 2.5% $50.6B 6%
14 Arizona 2.2% $44.4B 37%
15 New Jersey 2.1% $44.2B 2%
16 North Carolina 2.1% $43.8B 2%
17 Massachusetts 1.9% $38.8B 11%
18 South Carolina 1.9% $38.5B 1%
19 Tennessee 1.8% $37.7B -4%
20 Oregon 1.4% $28.0B -17%
21 Wisconsin 1.3% $27.1B -2%
22 Alabama 1.1% $23.7B -12%
23 Minnesota 1.1% $23.5B -13%
24 Utah 1.1% $22.4B 23%
25 Virginia 0.9% $19.0B -12%
26 Missouri 0.9% $18.7B -3%
27 Connecticut 0.9% $17.7B 2%
28 Maryland 0.8% $16.5B -8%
29 Iowa 0.8% $16.2B -5%
30 New Mexico 0.7% $15.3B 27%
31 Kansas 0.7% $14.6B 1%
32 Mississippi 0.7% $14.2B 3%
33 Nevada 0.6% $12.7B 22%
34 Colorado 0.5% $11.0B 4%
35 North Dakota 0.4% $8.6B 26%
36 Nebraska 0.4% $7.8B -5%
37 Oklahoma 0.4% $7.5B -4%
38 New Hampshire 0.3% $7.2B 1%
39 Alaska 0.3% $6.7B 13%
40 Arkansas 0.3% $6.6B -4%
41 Delaware 0.3% $5.5B 15%
42 West Virginia 0.2% $4.6B -5%
43 Idaho 0.2% $4.6B 7%
44 Rhode Island 0.2% $4.2B 36%
45 Dist of Columbia 0.2% $3.7B N/A
46 Maine 0.2% $3.2B 2%
47 Montana 0.1% $2.1B -12%
48 Vermont 0.1% $2.1B 9%
49 Wyoming 0.1% $2.0B -4%
50 South Dakota 0.1% $1.9B -13%
51 Hawaii 0.0% $0.4B -14%

Louisiana is another standout, known for its massive LNG industry.

While it accounts for just 1.1% of U.S. GDP, it generates 4.5% of total exports, exceeding Florida, despite having a population nearly five times smaller. This imbalance underscores the importance of energy hubs in driving U.S. trade.

California, meanwhile, contributes 9.1% of exports ($188.4 billion), with Washington (3.2%) and Arizona (2.2%) also playing key roles across the West.

Most States Contribute Very Little

Beyond the top exporters, there’s a steep drop-off.

A total of 27 states each account for less than 1% of U.S. exports, with many contributing just a fraction of that. Smaller states like South Dakota, Wyoming, and Vermont each generate roughly 0.1% of exports, reflecting both their size and limited industrial base.

This level of concentration reveals how dependent U.S. trade is on a small number of states, particularly energy and manufacturing hubs.

While this concentration can drive efficiency, it also creates vulnerabilities. Economic shocks, policy changes, or disruptions in just a few regions could have an outsized impact on the entire U.S. export economy.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the countries that rely most on imported energy.

Ranked: The World’s 20 Largest Arms Companies by Revenue

2026-04-01 23:52:22

The world's biggest arms companies by revenue in 2024 according to SIPRI

The World’s 20 Largest Arms Companies by Revenue

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

  • Lockheed Martin generated $64.7B in arms sales in 2024, the highest of any company.
  • The top 20 defense firms brought in a combined $438.4 billion in arms revenue.
  • 14 of the top 20 companies are based in the U.S. or China.

A small group of companies dominates the global arms industry, with a clear leader at the top.

This chart, created by Iswardi Ishak using data from SIPRI, ranks the top 20 defense companies by arms sales in 2024. Lockheed Martin stands well ahead of its peers, highlighting the industry’s concentration among a handful of major contractors.

U.S. firms play an outsized role at the top of the ranking, while China and Europe continue to expand their presence, pointing to a gradually shifting global landscape.

Why U.S. Firms Dominate Global Arms Sales

U.S. companies account for six of the top 10 firms by arms revenue, reflecting their scale in high-cost, long-cycle defense programs. From fighter jets to missile defense systems, these projects create steady, long-term revenue streams.

Rank Company Arms Revenue ($B) Arms Revenue as % of Total Revenue
1 🇺🇸 Lockheed Martin Corp. 64.65 91.0
2 🇺🇸 RTX Corporation 43.60 54.0
3 🇺🇸 Northrop Grumman 37.85 92.2
4 🇬🇧 BAE Systems 33.79 95.4
5 🇺🇸 General Dynamics 33.63 70.4
6 🇺🇸 Boeing 30.55 45.9
7 🇷🇺 Rostec 27.12 69.7
8 🇨🇳 Aviation Industry Corp. 20.32 25.0
9 🇨🇳 China Electronics Technology Group 18.92 34.3
10 🇺🇸 L3Harris Technologies 16.21 76.0
11 🇨🇳 NORINCO 13.97 22.7
12 🇮🇹 Leonardo 13.83 72.0
13 🇪🇺 Airbus 13.37 17.9
14 🇨🇳 China State Shipbuilding Corp. 12.33 24.8
15 🇫🇷 Thales 11.80 53.0
16 🇺🇸 Huntington Ingalls Industries 10.28 89.1
17 🇨🇳 China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp. 10.23 30.0
18 🇺🇸 Leidos 9.37 56.2
19 🇺🇸 Amentum 8.33 60.1
20 🇩🇪 Rheinmetall 8.24 78.1

Together, these companies generate hundreds of billions in arms sales, but revenue is concentrated among the top players.

Lockheed Martin leads with nearly $65 billion in arms revenue, well ahead of RTX and Northrop Grumman.

General Dynamics, Boeing, and L3Harris Technologies also rank in the top 10, giving U.S. firms six of the top spots.

Europe and China Keep Building Influence

European firms remain major players, though their revenues trail the largest U.S. contractors. BAE Systems ranks fourth overall, while Leonardo, Airbus, Thales, and Rheinmetall also appear in the top 20.

Chinese state-owned enterprises feature prominently, including AVIC, CETC, NORINCO, China State Shipbuilding Corporation, and China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation. Together, they reflect China’s expanding defense industrial base across aerospace, electronics, and shipbuilding.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

Where do the world’s nuclear warheads reside? Check out this visualization to learn more.

Mapped: Median Annual Property Taxes by State

2026-04-01 21:47:28

See more visuals like this on the Voronoi app.

A choropleth map of the United States showing median annual property taxes by state in 2024, shaded from lowest to highest.

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Mapped: Median Annual Property Taxes by State in 2024

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

  • Property tax bills vary by more than 10x across U.S. states.
  • New Jersey has the highest median bill at $9,358, while West Virginia ($881) and Alabama ($890) are the lowest
  • The Northeast dominates the high end, with 7 of the 10 most expensive states.

Property taxes are one of the biggest ongoing costs of owning a home, and in some states they can add thousands of dollars a year to the price of staying put.

The U.S. national median annual property tax bill sits at $2,937, and the gap between the highest- and lowest-bill states stretches into the thousands of dollars.

This map shows the median annual property tax bill for owner-occupied homes by state using data from the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey 2024 1-Year Estimates, the latest available data as of March 2026.

Northeast States Have America’s Highest Property Tax Bills

New Jersey ranks first by a wide margin, with a median annual property tax bill of $9,358. It is followed by New Hampshire at $6,707, Connecticut at $6,573, New York at $6,542, and Massachusetts at $6,080.

Overall, seven of the top 10 states are in the Northeast, underscoring how heavily many local governments in the region rely on property taxes to fund schools and municipal services.

The table below ranks all 50 states by median annual property tax bill, from highest to lowest.

Rank State Median Annual Property Tax Bill
1 New Jersey $9,358
2 New Hampshire $6,707
3 Connecticut $6,573
4 New York $6,542
5 Massachusetts $6,080
6 Illinois $5,399
7 California $5,369
8 Vermont $5,026
9 Rhode Island $4,886
10 Washington $4,729
11 District of Columbia $4,594
12 Maryland $4,144
13 Texas $4,108
14 Alaska $3,976
15 Oregon $3,895
16 Nebraska $3,739
17 Wisconsin $3,680
18 Minnesota $3,501
19 Pennsylvania $3,214
20 Maine $3,103
21 Florida $2,993
22 Michigan $2,988
23 Kansas $2,983
24 South Dakota $2,940
25 Montana $2,939
26 Iowa $2,937
27 Ohio $2,937
28 Virginia $2,872
29 Colorado $2,828
30 Utah $2,648
31 Georgia $2,554
32 North Dakota $2,550
33 Hawaii $2,385
34 Nevada $2,143
35 North Carolina $2,044
36 Missouri $2,021
37 Wyoming $1,947
38 Idaho $1,912
39 Arizona $1,828
40 Indiana $1,798
41 New Mexico $1,776
42 Delaware $1,750
43 Oklahoma $1,672
44 Kentucky $1,611
45 Tennessee $1,488
46 South Carolina $1,337
47 Mississippi $1,221
48 Louisiana $1,187
49 Arkansas $1,113
50 Alabama $890
51 West Virginia $881

At the other end of the map, West Virginia has the lowest median bill at $881, followed closely by Alabama at $890. Arkansas ($1,113), Louisiana ($1,187), and Mississippi ($1,221) also sit well below the national median of $2,937.

Outside the Northeast, California ($5,369) and Washington ($4,729) stand out for high dollar bills driven in part by elevated home values.

Why U.S. Property Tax Bills Vary So Much

Property tax bills are driven by two factors: home values and how much local governments rely on property taxes.

This is why high-value states like California can generate large bills even with moderate rates, while lower-cost states tend to produce smaller annual burdens overall.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Mapped: Average House Prices by State on Voronoi.