Top 10 Countries for Foreigners to Work Abroad in 2026 : Visa & Job Guide

Guide for expats on the top 10 countries to work abroad in 2026, based on visa ease, job opportunities, and expat communities. Includes South Korea, Canada, Germany, Japan, and New Zealand, with details on teaching, tourism, and skilled work visas.

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Source: OT-Team(G), GoAbroad

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A newly released survey report has ranked the world's top ten destinations most suitable for expatriate employment, offering insight into where foreign professionals are most likely to thrive.

The report conducted a comprehensive evaluation of countries worldwide, examining employment conditions, visa policies, and living costs. Its findings highlight that the simplicity and efficiency of visa procedures are among the most critical indicators of a country's attractiveness to international workers.

The study also emphasizes that an ideal employment destination requires more than flexible immigration policies. A well-established expatriate community is equally important. According to the analysis, countries where newcomers can quickly integrate, build social connections, and access reliable support networks tend to provide a significantly better overseas working experience.

1. South Korea

Why? Teaching abroad can be one of the most rewarding work abroad experiences. South Korea is one of the best countries in the world to live and work because of its burgeoning economy, diverse population, compelling culture, and openness to foreigners.

Plus, native English speakers are often paid very well and provided affordable (or free!) accommodation to teach English in South Korean schools. Working abroad in South Korea isn't all about work though; spend free time sampling local cuisine, learning the language, and exploring Seoul!

2. France

Why? France is an excellent country to work abroad due to its high standard of living, beautiful cities and landscapes, and large expat community. The French highly value their language, and you're sure to pick it up given they'll expect you to learn it!

With a au pair or tutoring job, your language skills will improve exponentially. While it may be a bit difficult to secure a work visa, the effort is well worth it to score a job in one of Europe's most influential countries.

3. Japan

Why? Many find work in Japan as English teachers, but did you know there's also a demand for ski and snowboard instructors? If you're a big fan of the outdoors, consider traveling to work at some of the biggest ski resorts in the world.

With large mountain ranges and frequent snowfall, Japan is a haven for both veteran skiers and those with an interest in learning. There are also courses you can take prior to becoming an instructor. Other jobs include caring for the elderly and agricultural work.

4. Canada

Why? For US citizens in particular, the neighbor in the north may be the most attractive option for work abroad. With visas relatively easy to obtain by US passport holders, and sponsorships sometimes attainable through Canadian employers, it's a great option for many. Jobs in tourism and hospitality are the most popular and available, but there are also opportunities in the education, technology, and healthcare industries as well.

5. New Zealand

Why? Find work in childcare as an au pair, learn about agriculture with an internship, or live an active lifestyle with a job in adventure tourism; New Zealand truly offers it all. Not to mention, this island country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean is hands down one of the most beautiful places to live and work in the world!

Consisting of the North and South Islands, New Zealand offers diversity in both population and landscape. The country has also recently made headlines with its progressive health policies and stance on international issues like climate change.

6. Germany

Why? Germany should not be overlooked when you're deciding where to live and work abroad! You have a great chance of gaining employment as the economy is strong and unemployment is low. Germans are known to have a great work-life balance, meaning you'll have time to explore local sights, take part in festivals and events, and spend time expanding your international network.

The country requires insurance for all, is predominantly welcoming to foreigners and immigrants, and has opportunities ranging from data science to camp counseling. That's why Germany is one of the best countries to work abroad!

7. Cambodia

Why? Most likely, if you've been looking for work abroad, you've seen that teaching English is one of the best gigs available if you're not ready to commit to learning a language or getting a new degree. This is especially true in Cambodia, where you can easily live and travel on a teacher's salary.

By teaching, you'll be making a positive difference in the lives of your students, and be traveling in a more sustainable way. This is a great option for those looking to work abroad as soon as possible!

8. Singapore

Why? Singapore is an island city-state in Southeast Asia, located below the Malaysian Peninsula. It's a hub of activity, where travelers and locals meet in busy markets and city streets. Expats have long extolled what a perfect place Singapore is to live and work. It's considered one of the cleanest and safest places in Asia; a mecca for those seeking jobs abroad in a culturally diverse and interesting place.

9. United Kingdom

Why? If you're between the ages of 18 and 30, you may qualify for a working holiday visa in the UK. Even if you need to apply for a different type of work visa, the past two years have taken their toll on businesses in the United Kingdom, and jobs there are a-plenty!

Some opportunities even provide accommodation and support prior to arrival. If you're interested in moving to a location where you already know the lingo, this may be a great option for you. You'll also have access to transportation around the country and Europe!

10. Ecuador

Why? Ecuador is one of the best countries for expats to work. You'll find that most work in the tourism or education sector, but there are opportunities with multinational companies as well. The country flaunts an ideal climate, lively community celebrations and traditions, unrivaled natural wonders, and a low cost of living. Additionally, you're sure to be surrounded by other expats willing to help a fellow adventurer.

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China Smartphone Price Surge 2026 : Budget Phone Costs Jump 20%

Major Chinese smartphone brands (Xiaomi, OPPO, vivo, Honor) are raising prices in March 2026 due to an 80% chip cost surge. Mid-range phones increase up to 20%, making budget phones scarce. Consider battery replacement or buying before promotions end.

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The End of Cheap Phones? China Braces for the Biggest Smartphone Price Surge in 5 Years


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If you've been living in China for a while, you've likely enjoyed the perks of being in the world's "tech factory"—flagship smartphones with killer specs at prices that make your friends back home jealous. But if you're planning an upgrade this year, you might want to move fast. The era of the "budget flagship" is hitting a massive wall.


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According to industry reports from late February 2026, we are looking at the most significant collective price surge the market has seen in half a decade.


The "Luxury" Chip: Why Your Pocket is Hurting


The culprit isn't just "corporate greed"—it's the hardware. The cost of memory and storage chips, once the cheapest parts of a phone, has gone into overdrive. Since bottoming out in 2024, prices have been climbing for quarters, and 2026 has seen them go "out of control," according to insiders at Honor.


The numbers are eye-watering:


Procurement costs for smartphone chips have jumped over 80% year-on-year.


TrendForce data shows that in just the last three months, spot prices for some storage chips have surged by more than 300%.


A 1TB flash chip that cost around 200 RMB in 2025 is now nearing 600 RMB.


March Madness: The Brands Making the Move


If you've been eyeing a new Xiaomi, OPPO, vivo, Honor, or OnePlus, be prepared for a "March Madness" that has nothing to do with basketball. Most major Chinese brands are reportedly prepping a new round of price adjustments starting in early March.


For high-end flagship models, sources at OPPO suggest we could see price jumps of over 1,000 RMB. But the real victims are the "budget" phones. Memory now accounts for nearly 30% of the total cost of a mid-to-low-end device. For the famous "thousand-yuan" ($150) phones that many expats use as secondary devices or work phones, profit margins have officially hit zero.


The "Budget Phone" is Disappearing


We're already seeing this play out. The recently released Redmi K90 series and iQOO 15 are already 100 to 600 RMB more expensive than the models they replaced. Mid-range phones from Lenovo and OPPO are seeing universal hikes, some as high as 20%.


Market analysts predict the average smartphone price in China will climb to $465 (approx. 3,188 RMB) this year. While that might still sound reasonable compared to an iPhone Pro Max in London or New York, it's a massive shift for the local market.


To Upgrade or To Repair?


The reaction among the local community has been a mix of shock and "sticker shock." While many are venting that they "simply can't afford to upgrade anymore," a new trend is emerging: The Battery Swap. Instead of dropping 5,000 RMB on a new device, more people are choosing to spend a few hundred RMB to replace their current phone's battery and hold out until the market cools down.


For now, major platforms like JD.com are still running promotions, keeping retail prices relatively stable. 


Are you planning to snag a new phone, or are you sticking with your current device? Let us know your strategy in the comments!


Source: 中国新闻周刊, 南方都市报






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China Telecom Fraud : 16 Executed, 41,000 Sentenced in Myanmar Repatriation Cases

China's Supreme People's Court reveals over 41,000 suspects repatriated from northern Myanmar for telecom fraud were sentenced by end-2025, including 16 executed. Key syndicates like Ming and Bai groups dismantled, with cases involving 10+ billion yuan and violent crimes.

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A press conference held by China's supreme people's court on February 26, 2026.

By the end of 2025, courts across China had sentenced more than 41,000 suspects repatriated from northern Myanmar for their roles in telecommunications fraud, according to information obtained by the Global Times from the Supreme People's Court (SPC) on Thursday.

An SPC spokesperson said that over 27,000 first-instance telecom fraud cases linked to northern Myanmar had been concluded nationwide. Judicial proceedings involving the Ming and Bai criminal groups — two of the widely noted "four major family" syndicates in the region — have now been fully completed.

In these cases, 39 defendants received life imprisonment or more severe penalties, including 16 who were sentenced to death and executed. Authorities said the two major cross-border armed criminal organizations have been dismantled.

The Ministry of Public Security launched a nationwide campaign in July 2023 targeting telecom fraud operations based in northern Myanmar that affected Chinese citizens. Over the past two years, the Ming and Bai groups have been sentenced, while cases involving the Wei and Liu syndicates have moved into the prosecution stage, meaning all four major networks have entered the judicial process.

On November 3, 2025, the Shenzhen Intermediate People's Court in Guangdong sentenced Bai Suocheng, Bai Yingcang, Yang Liqiang, Hu Xiaojiang and Chen Guangyi — key members of the Bai group — to death with additional penalties for crimes including intentional homicide, assault, fraud, drug-related offenses, kidnapping and running illegal casinos, according to Xinhua News Agency.

SPC review found that the Bai group, led by Bai Yingcang and other principal figures, had built and jointly developed multiple compounds in Myanmar's Kokang region. These sites were used to host financiers involved in illicit activities and were protected by armed personnel.

Investigations also confirmed that since 2015 the Ming family syndicate, led by Ming Guoping, Ming Zhenzhen and other core members, had established several compounds in Kokang. The group recruited investors, provided armed protection for telecom fraud and online gambling operations, and handled illicit funds exceeding 10 billion yuan (about $1.4 billion). The organization also collaborated with other fraud networks in violent acts that resulted in the deaths of 14 Chinese nationals and injuries to several others.

The SPC spokesperson said courts have applied strict and efficient measures in handling telecom and online fraud cases to protect public safety and property.

Between 2021 and 2025, Chinese courts concluded more than 159,000 first-instance telecom and online fraud cases, sentencing over 338,000 defendants. The number of concluded cases and convicted individuals rose sharply in 2023 and 2024, but growth slowed significantly in 2025, which authorities said reflects the phased impact of ongoing anti-fraud efforts.

Source:https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202602/1355766.shtml
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2025 AI Layoffs Analysis : Real Drivers, Impact & Future Workforce Strategy

Analysis of 2025 global layoffs: 50,000–100,000 jobs cut were linked to AI, but economic pressures & restructuring were primary drivers. Examines impact on roles in customer service, tech, and admin, and outlines essential skills for the AI era.

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From Silicon Valley to Europe and China, 2025 saw a wave of global layoffs at several high-profile companies, many of which were attributed to artificial intelligence. But is AI really the main culprit? And if so, what human skills are still needed in the rapidly developing AI era?


In this piece, CEIBS Professor of Management Han Jian and Research Fellow Guo Jinghao unpack what the global layoff wave really tells us about AI, work, and the future of workforce strategy.


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Han Jian

CEIBS Professor of Management

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Guo Jinghao

CEIBS Research Fellow


While the rapid advancement of AI was perhaps the defining business story of 2025, it was often linked to another extremely important narrative: a wave of international layoffs. The layoffs of 2025, however, while clearly global, were not a simple a technology story. In fact, they reflected a complex convergence of the economic pressure and structural change driven by digital and AI transformation.


Data from Challenger, Gray & Christmas indicate that between 50,000 and 100,000 layoffs worldwide were explicitly linked to AI or automation, mostly in the United States with smaller numbers in Europe and Asia. Companies such as Amazon, Microsoft, UPS, Nestlé and Verizon were prominent examples. Some of these cuts were directly tied to AI—especially in customer service, back-office support and routine technical roles—but other major reasons included weak demand, high interest rates, strategic refocusing and business restructuring.


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Global layoffs, local dynamics


The United States is at the centre of this cycle. This is not due to broader economic collapse but to a combination of high borrowing costs, profit pressure, a flexible labour market with weaker protections, and restructuring linked to digital and AI change. Last October alone, US companies announced 153,074 job cuts—the worst October in over 20 years—and by late November, total layoffs had reached about 1.17 million, the highest since the pandemic[1].


Of these, around 54,000–55,000 were explicitly attributed to AI or automation, mainly affecting customer service, administration, HR and some technical teams. Firms such as Salesforce, Amazon and IBM openly stated that AI replaced parts of their workforce. Still, AI-related layoffs represented only about 4–5%of total US job cuts[2]. This shows that while AI is reshaping corporate workforces, the main drivers are still a wider economic slowdown, cost pressure and strategic restructuring. In many cases AI is less the sole cause than a powerful justification for change.


In Europe, many companies reportedly announced layoffs or hiring freezes, especially in technology, manufacturing, automotive, banking, telecoms and equipment. Companies mostly cited cost control, profit pressure, restructuring, and digital efficiency. Automotive and manufacturing firms such as Continental, Bosch and Daimler Truck have been hit particularly hard, along with insurers, renewable-energy companies and multinationals[3]. Banks and service sectors also tightened staff. AI and digitalisation are part of these strategies, but usually as elements of broader restructuring rather than the main cause. Economic pressure and sector transformation remain the dominant forces.


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China, meanwhile, presents a different picture.  The country has not produced nationwide statistics that explicitly attribute layoffs to AI. Broad employment pressure in 2025 has been driven primarily by macroeconomic factors. By last November, unemployment among 16–24-year-olds (excluding students) remained high at 16.9%, while unemployment among 25–29-year-olds was 7.2%[4]. Long-cycle struggles in the property market, partial manufacturing relocation, and subdued consumption are the main drivers of this pressure.


At the firm level, however, technology-related restructuring has become increasingly visible. Specific examples show workforce changes linked not only to economic weakness but also to business portfolio shifts and technological upgrading. Alibaba's workforce declined sharply between 2022 and 2025 largely due to divestments and organisational restructuring[5], while Baidu reduced 20–30% of staff in certain non-core units. In China, AI typically acts as a catalyst embedded within broader restructuring processes rather than a headline reason for layoffs, in contrast to the US where AI is more frequently cited explicitly.


Taken together, evidence from the US, Europe and China shows that the 2025 was of layoffs reflects the interaction of AI-driven transformation with economic stress and broader shifts in corporate strategy. While AI is clearly changing management structures and is increasingly cited as an independent reason for workforce reshaping, especially in white-collar and back-office roles, macroeconomic conditions, rising costs, strategic realignment and efficiency needs remain the main forces. AI plays a dual role: it is both a real driver of increased productivity and a narrative tool that helps companies justify structural change and stricter cost discipline.


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AI and the reshaping of corporate workforces


At the corporate level, AI is not merely a technology—it is a capital-intensive project. Turning AI from promise into productivity requires vast and continuing investment in digital infrastructure, computing capacity, data capabilities, model deployment, and security and compliance architecture. These are long-cycle, capital-heavy commitments.


Data from Statista suggests that in 2025 alone, Meta, Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft are expected to spend hundreds of billions of dollars in capital expenditure, much of it channelled into AI-driven data centres and computing infrastructure[6]. Similar commitments are being made by leading Chinese technology companies including ByteDance, which plans to invest roughly RMB 160 billion (around USD 23 billion) in 2025–2026, with about half committed to advanced AI chips such as Nvidia's H200 and to computing infrastructure[7]. IDC forecasts that global AI infrastructure spending will exceed USD 200 billion by 2028, while global cloud infrastructure spending reached USD 102.6 billion in Q3 2025, up 25 percent year-on-year[8]. To finance this "capital engineering" of AI, many firms inevitably look to scrutinise labour costs. What follows is not a simple one-to-one substitution of machines for people, but a deeper structural reshaping: companies are reconfiguring both capital and labour—squeezing the middle, decomposing workflows, pushing more activities to platforms and outsourcing.


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Recent redundancy announcements show that the roles most exposed are those defined by repetition, clear rules and information-processing intensity: customer support, basic content editing, standardised reporting, data entry, as well as parts of traditional quality assurance maintenance coding and software development. In these domains, AI offers an attractive mix of efficiency, savings, stability and scalability, making them the first targets when firms seek to optimise labour structures and improve returns. This aligns with a recent MIT study estimates that AI could theoretically replace about 11.7% of US jobs, affecting roughly USD 1.2 trillion in wages[9]. Because these jobs are highly standardised with clear decision boundaries, once AI and automation tools mature, substitution—or fundamental redesign—becomes much easier.


Swedish fintech company Klarna is a case in point. The company's AI assistant, developed with OpenAI, handled 2.3 million customer conversations within its first month, around two-thirds of all interactions—equivalent to the work of 700 full-time agents. While Klarna cut about 700 support roles in 2024 as automation ramped up, it partially rehired in 2025 to manage complex and high-value cases, settling on a hybrid model: AI for routine tasks, humans for nuanced judgement and customer trust[10].


The lesson is clear: AI is not merely replacing jobs; it is restructuring entire service chains and organisational architectures.


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Talent scarcity and the rise of meta-skills


AI is also generating new and more demanding talent needs. AI Workforce Consortium 2025 reports that AI-related job postings are growing faster than the available talent pool, creating structural scarcity[11]. AI skills are spreading rapidly across functions, with capability expectations being rewritten beyond technical roles into marketing, communications, project management, operations and even executive support. Increasingly, firms are not simply asking whether employees understand AI, but whether they can translate it into real productivity.


Once repetitive work is stripped away, the key question emerges: what capabilities must be kept? In other words, where does true human "irreplaceability" lie in an AI-driven age?


High-risk roles are mirrored by those whose value rises precisely because AI is advancing—roles that are cross-disciplinary, cognitively intensive, and combine capabilites. Broadly, these fall into two groups.


The first consists of technically qualified AI specialists: experts in machine learning, data engineering, MLOps, and cloud and computing infrastructure, as well as AI safety and governance. Demand for such talent is expanding sharply; they are becoming scarce strategic resources that define firms' competitive positioning.


The second group comprises high-value, human-centred business enablers. They may not write code, but they understand customers, operations and industry context. They know how to embed AI into real workflows, redesign processes, improve service experience and steer organisational change. They are the crucial translators between technical capability and commercial value.


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Career platform data suggests that AI skills have already featured in around 45% of executive job requirements and are spreading rapidly across finance, operations, design, sales and other non-technical positions—evidence that AI fluency is becoming a core competency in cross-functional roles[12].


As AI penetrates more sectors, soft skills and higher-order cognitive capabilities become even more critical. Communication, coordination, leadership and cross-department collaboration remain difficult for AI to replicate, and are increasingly decisive for organisations deciding whom to retain and redeploy. Demand is also rising for hires that are able to interpret model bias, manage ethical and compliance risk, and bring a governance mindset to AI deployment.


Surveys by McKinsey, BCG and PwC show that future resilience will not rest on mastery of any single tool but on a portfolio of meta skills—an aptitude for continuous learning, adaptability, deep business understanding, and collaborative problem-solving[13][14][15]. These meta-skills not only help individuals withstand role restructuring. They also underpin corporate returns on AI investment and the release of real productivity.


AI is therefore not merely changing which tasks are performed; it is reshaping how value, productivity, and competitiveness are defined.


Companies must now rethink three questions: which work must remain human; which can be automated; and which capabilities must be retrained and upgraded? Talent is no longer just a cost—it is the decisive strategic lever that determines whether enterprises can truly unlock AI's potential and sustain competitiveness. This is not a short-term disruption, but a multi-year process of deep restructuring.


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Leadership and the rewriting of the AI narrative


From the perspective of management education and leadership development, workforce transformation in the AI era is not a matter of upgrading tools. It is a systemic test of organisational capability, leadership philosophy and corporate purpose.


Recent corporate experience has repeatedly shown that if leaders treat AI merely as a cost-cutting instrument, the result is often superficial efficiency gains rather than sustainable productivity or innovation. Business schools must therefore place "leading AI transformation" at the centre of their agenda—integrating technological understanding, organisational redesign and talent strategy to cultivate leaders capable of building long-term value.


Effective AI leadership requires reframing the narrative, from "replacing people" to "reconstructing work and value creation". This narrative shapes trust, psychological security and an organisation's willingness to learn about, experiment with, and adopt AI.


Equally important is long-term investment in talent. Reskilling cannot remain rhetorical; it must become operational strategy. Leading firms demonstrate that downsizing and reskilling are not mutually exclusive.


Although companies such as IBM, AT&T, Siemens, Accenture, Amazon and Microsoft have all conducted layoffs over the past year, they have also invested heavily in employee reskilling and capability upgrading. Their shared lesson is that long-term competitiveness is built not by cutting alone, but by continuously upgrading their human capital as well.


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Leaders must also acquire the capability to redesign processes and restructure organisations. BCG warns that simply layering AI onto legacy workflows delivers only fragmented benefits. Only by reshaping end-to-end processes, and allowing humans and models to each focus on what they do best, can true productivity gains emerge[16].


In parallel, business schools should enhance education on psychological safety, learning cultures and ethical governance. PwC's research shows that permission to experiment, active learning support and avoidance of fear-based management are critical to sustainable AI adoption[17].


Corporate thinking about "people efficiency" must be rewritten. If companies treat productivity gains merely as an excuse to remove a few more workers, then their ambitions are too narrow. A large body of economic and management scholarship supports the view that technological change need not turn surplus labour into "waste," but can instead create new productive capacity when organisations choose to invest in people.


From a management perspective, high-performing firms succeed not by eliminating labour, but by continuously reconfiguring skills and redeploying people into higher-value roles[18].


Historical evidence—from the Industrial Revolution to the IT era—confirms that economies and firms that invest in skill upgrading and organisational redesign at times of technological disruption achieve greater innovation, stronger resilience, and more sustainable growth than those that rely solely on shedding labour.


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Beyond the headlines


The global layoff narrative, therefore, should not focus only on short-term and attention-grabbing headlines about AI but be viewed within the larger context of a long cycle of talent strategy and organisational evolution.


AI is not reshaping one or two occupations; it is rewiring the logic of workforce strategy itself. Companies must continually reassess which work must remain in human hands, which can be automated, and which capabilities must be retrained and upgraded.


This should also present a lesson to managers and firms. Ultimately, truly strong companies do not rely solely on layoffs to cut costs—they use reskilling to turn people into drivers of future growth.


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References:

[1]. CNBC. Layoff announcements this year top 1.1 million, the most since 2020 when pandemic hit, Challenger says[EB/OL]. (2025-12-04)[2025-12-25]. https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/04/layoff-announcements-this-year-top-1point1-million-the-most-since-2020-when-pandemic-hit-challenger-says.html.

[2]. Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc. Challenger Report: 71,321 Job Cuts on Restructurings, Closings, Economy[EB/OL]. (2025-12-04)[2025-12-25]. https://www.challengergray.com/blog/challenger-report-71321-job-cuts-on-restructurings-closings-economy/.

[3]. Reuters. European companies cut jobs in response to slowing economy[EB/OL]. (2025-11-27)[2025-12-25]. https://www.reuters.com/business/european-companies-cut-jobs-response-slowing-economy-2025-10-06/.

[4]. Reuters. China's youth jobless rate 16.9% in November [EB/OL]. (2025-12-18)[2025-12-25]. https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/chinas-youth-jobless-rate-169-november-2025-12-18/.

[5]. 阿里巴巴集團控股有限公司. 2025 財務年度報告[EB/OL]. (2025-06-26)[2025-12-25]. https://www1.hkexnews.hk/listedco/listconews/sehk/2025/0626/2025062601065_c.pdf.

[6]. Statista. Chart: Tech's AI-Fueled Spending Surge[EB/OL]. (2025-11-20)[2025-12-25]. https://www.statista.com/chart/35046/capital-expenditure-of-meta-alphabet-amazon-and-microsoft/.

[7]. Reuters. ByteDance, Alibaba keen to order Nvidia H200 chips after Trump green light: sources[EB/OL]. (2025-12-10)[2025-12-25]. https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/bytedance-alibaba-keen-order-nvidia-h200-chips-after-trump-green-light-sources-2025-12-10/.

[8]. IDC. Artificial Intelligence Infrastructure Spending to Surpass the $200Bn USD Mark in the Next 5 years, According to IDC[EB/OL]. (2025-02-18)[2025-12-25]. https://my.idc.com/getdoc.jsp?containerId=prUS52758624.

[9]. Chopra, A., Bhattacharya, S., Salvador, D., Paul, A., Wright, T., Garg, A., Ahmad, F., Schwarze, A. C., Raskar, R., & Balaprakash, P. (2025). The Iceberg Index: Measuring skills-centered exposure in the AI economy. arXiv. https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.25137

[10]. Klarna. Klarna AI assistant handles two-thirds of customer service chats in its first month[EB/OL]. (2024-02-27)[2025-12-25]. https://www.klarna.com/international/press/klarna-ai-assistant-handles-two-thirds-of-customer-service-chats-in-its-first-month/.

[11]. AI-Enabled ICT Workforce Consortium. ICT in Motion: The Next Wave of AI Integration[R/OL]. San Jose: Cisco Systems, 2025[2025-12-25]. https://www.cisco.com/content/dam/cisco-cdc/site/m/ai-workforce-consortium/documents/2025-ai-workforce-consortium-full-report.pdf.

[12]. McKinsey. Superagency in the workplace: Empowering people to unlock AI's full potential at work[EB/OL]. (2025-01-28)[2025-12-25]. https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/tech-and-ai/our-insights/superagency-in-the-workplace-empowering-people-to-unlock-ais-full-potential-at-work

[13]. McKinsey. One year of agentic AI: Six lessons from the people doing the work[EB/OL]. (2025-09-12)[2025-12-25]. https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/quantumblack/our-insights/one-year-of-agentic-ai-six-lessons-from-the-people-doing-the-work

[14]. BCG. How Agentic AI Is Transforming Enterprise Platforms[EB/OL]. (2025-10-13)[2025-12-25]. https://www.bcg.com/publications/2025/how-agentic-ai-is-transforming-enterprise-platforms

[15]. PwC. Ep. 33: Resilience reinvented: Harnessing AI and technology[EB/OL]. (2025-12-10)[2025-12-25]. https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/issues/crisis-solutions/disruption-podcast-series/33-resilience-reinvented-tech-ai.html

[16]. BCG. Companies Must Go Beyond AI Adoption to Realize Its Full Potential[EB/OL]. (2025-06-26)[2025-12-25]. https://www.bcg.com/press/26june2025-beyond-ai-adoption-full-potential

[17]. PwC. Beyond the algorithm: Why sustainable AI is the defining human challenge of 2026[EB/OL]. (2025-12-15)[2025-12-25]. https://www.pwc.be/en/news-publications/2025/responsible-ai-beyond-the-algorithm.html

[18]. Teece, D.J. (2007), Explicating dynamic capabilities: the nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strat. Mgmt. J., 28: 1319-1350. https://doi.org/10.1002/smj.640

[19]. CNBC. AT&T's $1 billion gambit: Retraining nearly half its workforce[EB/OL]. (2018-03-13)[2025-12-25]. https://www.cnbc.com/2018/03/13/atts-1-billion-gambit-retraining-nearly-half-its-workforce.html

[20]. Amazon. Upskilling 2025[EB/OL]. (2020-10-02)[2025-12-25]. https://www.aboutamazon.com/news/workplace/upskilling-2025.

[21]. Forbes. The Future of Work Is New Collar Jobs: So Are You Ready?[EB/OL]. (2024-05-28)[2025-12-25]. https://www.forbes.com/sites/neilsahota/2024/05/28/the-future-of-work-is-new-collar-jobs-so-are-you-ready/

[22]. Freise, L. R., Ritz, E., Bretschneider, U., Rietsche, R., Beitinger, G., & Leimeister, J. M. (2025). How Siemens empowered workforce re- and upskilling through digital learning. MIS Quarterly Executive, 24(3), 239–254. https://doi.org/10.17705/2msqe.00118

[23]. Accenture. AI-ready infrastructure: Enabling enterprise potential in the era of AI[EB/OL]. (2025-05-05)[2025-12-25]. https://www.accenture.com/content/dam/accenture/final/a-com-migration/pdf/pdf-171/accenture-ever-ready-infrastructure.pdf


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