UPS plans to cut 12,000 jobs as demand for package delivery stagnates, executives said Tuesday. The layoffs will eliminate around 2.4 percent of UPS’s global workforce of roughly 495,000, with about 75 percent of the job reductions coming in the first half of 2024. Executives said they don’t expect those jobs to return.
“It’s a change in the way we work,” Chief Financial Officer Brian Newman said Tuesday during a conference call with analysts. “So as volume returns to the system, we don’t expect these jobs to come back. It’s changing the effective way we operate.”
UPS saw its fortunes surge early in the pandemic as online shopping became a more central part of people’s lives, but package volume has decreased since then. The company on Tuesday said package volume fell 7.4 percent in the fourth quarter, while revenue declined 7.8 percent year-over-year.
The Washington Post








