Kenyans face job loss risks in 2026

A recent poll shows 15% of Kenyans fear retrenchment in 2026 amid economic pressures and AI adoption. Nearly six in ten companies plan layoffs, highlighting automation's impact. This threatens clerical workers and high-paid managers the most.

As 2026 begins, Kenyan workers are increasingly anxious about job security, with a December 2025 Infotrak poll indicating that 15% fear retrenchment this year. A survey of business leaders reveals nearly six in ten companies planning layoffs, driven by economic pressures and AI adoption.

AI integration is a primary factor. Rather than mass cuts, firms are optimizing workforces by merging roles and using AI for additional tasks like data entry, scheduling, and customer support. Clerical, secretarial, and basic administrative jobs have seen low demand compared to 2024 as agentic AI handles these efficiently.

Skills mismatch exacerbates the issue. The half-life of technical skills has fallen to five years, meaning half of knowledge from 2021 or earlier is likely outdated. A September 2025 recruitment survey found 46% of business leaders citing lack of AI skills as a key reason for targeting employees in downsizing. High-salaried middle managers face higher risks, often replaced by AI-fluent juniors who deliver similar output at lower cost amid cost-cutting efforts.

In Kenya, regulatory and economic strains add pressure. Stricter KRA digital monitoring and new tax measures are pushing SMEs to automate back-office functions for compliance without extra hires. Rising business costs and fears of a 2026 drought are leading companies to halt recruitment and adopt cautious approaches.

To stay employable, experts recommend focusing on measurable results, mastering applied AI tools, honing irreplaceable human skills like empathy and negotiation, and diversifying income through side hustles as a safety net. This shift underscores a performance-driven job market where presence alone no longer suffices.

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South Korean business leaders, led by KCCI Chairman Chey Tae-won, advocate for AI investments and public-private partnerships at a 2026 strategy conference.
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South Korean business lobbies urge AI-led growth and stronger public-private ties in 2026

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South Korea's leading business lobbies called for aggressive investments in artificial intelligence (AI) to secure global competitiveness in 2026. Chey Tae-won, chairman of the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI), emphasized building swift investment capabilities in AI and green sectors amid challenges like low growth and geopolitical uncertainties. Other groups highlighted the need for eased regulations and stronger public-private cooperation.

読売新聞のアンケートで、日本の大手企業トップの40%以上が、生成AIの影響で今後10年以内に自社従業員が減少すると予測した。30%以上の幹部が経営判断にAIを活用しているが、倫理や安全に関する決定では人間に依存すべきだと強調している。

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専門家らは、人工知能の進歩が今年、銀行セクターで20万の雇用喪失を招く可能性があると警告した。この予測は、AIが金融雇用に与える影響への懸念が高まっていることを強調している。この警告は、業界における急速な技術開発の中で出されたものだ。

Leading South African executives express cautious optimism for 2026, highlighting potential growth from rate cuts and AI advancements while noting persistent structural challenges.

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日本ではAIに対する公衆の信頼が高く、労働力不足解消の手段として期待されているが、職場での実際の利用は限定的だ。政府と企業はAI導入を推進している一方、クリエイターからは著作権と収入への懸念が上がっている。専門家はスキル不足が障壁だと指摘する。

最近の報告書によると、2025年に英国人の58%が重大なオンラインリスクに遭遇した。AIの使用増加がデジタル信頼の低下に寄与したと結論づけられている。詐欺とサイバーブリングが主な懸念事項として浮上した。

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Analysts suggest China’s rapid AI adoption may limit the economic fallout from its rapidly ageing population. As fertility rates fall across Asia, sustaining growth with fewer workers poses a daunting challenge. The region’s deep semiconductor, tech hardware, and machinery ecosystems enable faster and cheaper deployment than other regions.

 

 

 

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