Journalism begins where hype ends

,,

AI is one of the most profound things we're working on as humanity. It's more profound than fire or electricity

     Sundar Pichai      
Google CEO

Britain hit hardest by AI Job Cuts: Morgan Stanley

Britain hit hardest by AI Job Cuts: Morgan Stanley

A young man watching the Big Ben in London with a UK flag umbrella.
February 15, 2026 12:36 PM IST | Written by Vaibhav Jha

The increasing adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in workspaces has hit Britain “hardest” with Briton businesses reporting net job losses down 8%- the highest among its peers- US, Japan, Germany and Australia.

The latest study comes from leading investment bank Morgan Stanley, claiming the impact of AI on workplaces has resulted in the UK “losing more jobs than creating”, as per a recent report in Bloomberg.

The report comes at a time when the official unemployment rate is at 5.1% this quarter in the UK, highest ever since 2021.

According to the Morgan Stanley report findings, the impact of AI led to 8% net job losses- the highest among its peers Japan, Germany, Australia and U.S., and two times the international average.

The survey studied businesses from five key industries- retail, real-estate, healthcare equipment, transport and automobiles- that have adopted AI for at least one year. Study revealed that while the UK also reported 11.5% increase in work productivity due to AI impact, she still lost more jobs than creating new ones.

The Bloomberg report observed that this significant increase in work productivity for conglomerates due to AI has come at a significant cost to the human workforce.

A recent report in Reuters has observed that job vacancies in the UK have continued to fall till December 2025 amid an overall deteriorating market conditions amid greater political instability.

The rise in job cuts has only led to frustration among the young Britons who have taken the brunt of AI impact. A recent report by international recruitment agency Randstad, published in The Guardian, observed that more than 25% of UK workers worry about AI replacing them completely.

Author

  • Vaibhav Jha

    Vaibhav Jha is an Editor and Co-founder of AI FrontPage. In his decade long career in journalism, Vaibhav has reported for publications including The Indian Express, Hindustan Times, and The New York Times, covering the intersection of technology, policy, and society. Outside work, he’s usually trying to persuade people to watch Anurag Kashyap films.