Amazon aims to shed more than 18,000 roles as it cuts costs, the technology giant’s boss says.
He added the announcement was brought forward “because one of our teammates leaked this information externally”.
The job cuts amount to around 6% of the company’s roughly 300,000-strong corporate workforce.
Amazon is the latest big technology firm to unveil major layoffs as the cost of living crisis sees customers cut back on spending.
The move comes after the technology giant said last year that it would reduce its headcount without putting a figure on how many jobs would be cut.
Jassy did not specify where affected employees were located, but he said the firm would communicate with organisations that represent employees “where applicable in Europe”.
He also said the “majority of role eliminations” would be in the Amazon Stores operations and its People, Experience, and Technology team.
In November Amazon said it was starting a round of layoffs as it focused on reducing expenses but did not give a figure of how many jobs it would cut.
At the time US media reported that the company would shed around 10,000 roles.
The firm had already introduced a hiring freeze and halted some of its warehouse expansions, warning it had over-hired during the pandemic.
It has also taken steps to shut some parts of its business, cancelling projects such as a personal delivery robot.