Tech companies will be slashing more jobs this year than they did last year, according to a report by Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
During the first half of the year, tech employers said they would be cutting 48,402 jobs compared with 28,883 jobs during the same time period last year, according to a mid-year report published Monday by the recruiting firm. That's a 68 percent increase from a year ago. And that doesn't even include Microsoft's recent announcement to layoff 14 percent of its workforce.
Read More Wall Street welcomes Microsoft job cuts
Tech firms with most payroll cuts for first half of the year
Date | Company | Cuts |
---|---|---|
5/24/2014 | Hewlett-Packard co. | 16,000 |
1/20/2014 | Intel Corp. | 5,350 |
2/27/2014 | Maximus Inc. (Affordable Care Act call center) | 1,600 |
5/19/2014 | LivingSocial | 1,500 |
1/23/2014 | Texas Instruments Inc. | 1,100 |
3/1/2014 | Verizon Wireless Irvine | 1,092 |
5/30/2014 | Dell Inc. (India plant) | 1,000 |
1/29/2014 | EMC Corp. | 1,000 |
4/9/2014 | Intel (Costa Rica plant) | 1,000 |
2/27/2014 | Sony Electronics | 1,000 |
2/13/2014 | Verizon call center | 600 |
1/26/2014 | Center Partners call center | 500 |
2/28/2014 | Cox Communications (call centers) | 500 |
Source: Source: Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc.
At this pace, job cuts in the tech sector this year will likely be the highest since 2009, when tech job cuts reached 174,629, according to the report. Tech employers slashed the most jobs in 2001 with 695,581 payrolls cut, according to the firm.
Read More
Computer firms announced the most layoffs during the first half of the year, with 30,002 jobs being cut. The telecommunications industry announced 5,214 job cuts and the electronics industry set to downsize by 5,356 jobs.
The news of the spike in tech layoffs comes ahead of the July payrolls report to be released Friday.
Read MoreThese tech companies have the best pay and perks
—By CNBC's Cadie Thompson. Follow her on Twitter @CadieThompson.