How a little-known tax change sparked a tech layoff surge

Skye Jacobs

Posts: 658   +15
Staff
The big picture: A subtle but far-reaching shift in US tax law has upended the financial foundation of the technology industry, accelerating a wave of layoffs and reshaping how companies approach innovation. While headlines have pointed to over-hiring, economic volatility, and the rise of artificial intelligence as causes for the mass job losses in tech, a less visible factor has quietly played a pivotal role: a change to Section 174 of the tax code that dramatically altered how research and development costs are treated.

For nearly seventy years, US companies could immediately deduct the full cost of their research and development activities, from engineering salaries to software development and contractor fees. This policy, rooted in Section 174 of the Internal Revenue Code since 1954, encouraged businesses to invest in innovation and keep R&D operations within the United States.

The approach fostered the growth of iconic tech giants and allowed startups and established firms alike to take risks, experiment, and expand rapidly.

That landscape changed in 2022, when a provision from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which had been delayed, took effect. To offset the cost of lowering the corporate tax rate, lawmakers required that R&D expenses be spread out, or amortized, over five years for domestic activities and fifteen years for foreign ones, rather than being deducted all at once.

This adjustment, designed as a political maneuver to make the tax bill appear fiscally balanced, was largely unknown outside tax and accounting circles until its real-world consequences became impossible to ignore.

The impact was immediate and severe. When companies filed their 2022 tax returns under the new rules, they found themselves unable to offset their R&D spending against taxable income fully. For cash-strapped firms and those not yet profitable, the result was a sudden and painful increase in tax bills, just as venture funding was drying up and borrowing costs were rising. The financial pressure forced companies to make tough decisions, and in many cases, the largest and most flexible expense – headcount – was the first to be reduced.

Since the start of 2023, the tech industry has shed more than half a million jobs, with some of the biggest names in the industry making substantial cuts. Meta reduced its workforce by nearly a quarter, Microsoft trimmed about 7 percent, and Amazon, Alphabet, and Salesforce all eliminated thousands of positions, often in product development and engineering – the very teams most affected by the loss of immediate R&D deductions.

Smaller firms, lacking the financial cushion of industry giants, faced even harsher realities. Twilio, Shopify, and Coinbase each slashed significant portions of their staff, with reductions of 22 percent, nearly 30 percent, and 36 percent, respectively, over the past two years.

The effects have not been limited to traditional tech companies. Throughout the 2010s, a wide array of businesses, ranging from retail to logistics and healthcare, relied on the same tax treatment to justify significant investments in software, data analytics, and internal tools.

The Section 174 change disrupted this model, pushing many companies from a position of taxable loss to taxable income, even when their actual cash flow had not improved. As a result, the layoffs and cutbacks have rippled through the broader digital economy, which, together with core tech, accounts for about 20 percent of US GDP.

The magnitude of the layoffs has been strikingly disproportionate compared to other sectors. While most industries saw job cuts in the low single digits, tech experienced a 60 percent surge in layoffs between 2022 and 2023, with entire divisions – especially in R&D – vanishing almost overnight.

The consequences extend beyond the companies themselves, affecting local economies and service industries that rely on high-paid tech workers to sustain demand for everything from housing to restaurants and transportation.

As Congress debates whether to reverse the Section 174 change, the politics remain complex. Restoring the old rules would reduce tax revenue and could be seen as favoring large corporations, even as the broader economic fallout continues. For many workers and communities already affected, any relief may come too late.

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Between baseline budgeting and fixed growth estimates, the system is rigged to prevent any chance to actually fixing anything. Add to that that corporations do the exact same thing by looking at R&D as an expense and concerned about only the next quarters stock price, and it's no wonder we're on our way to losing our tech edge the same way we decimated manufacturing.

Unlike the above socialist/communist rants above, I still believe in capitalism. It's just that in every definition or text of capitalism I've seen, I don't remember "Maximizing shareholder value" as it's overriding tenant and guiding principal. Capitalism does not equal greed. At least it's not supposed to.

While we're at it, I don't remember politicians mentioned at all as a part of capitalism either.
 
We'd be WAY better off to close the IRS and add a national sales tax that EVERYONE pays. Do away with it all....burn the IRS to the ground. The ignorant want to call ICE the "Gestapo/SS" but in the USA the real Gestapo/SS is the IRS! No other government organization has the power to take all your assets, garnish future earnings and toss you in jail.
 
Capitalism does not equal greed. At least it's not supposed to.

Yes it is; that's literally the entire point. That's also why most of the rest of the world (aside from a few areas where the US has held sway, like Chile) has abandoned the US's implementation of Capitalism for alternatives (either Socialism or the European Capitalistic model).

The saddest part is the US's structural problems are simple to fix, except for that fact they are politically unacceptable. It's more acceptable to let the system to collapse then to actually fix it.
 
Yes it is; that's literally the entire point. That's also why most of the rest of the world (aside from a few areas where the US has held sway, like Chile) has abandoned the US's implementation of Capitalism for alternatives (either Socialism or the European Capitalistic model).

The saddest part is the US's structural problems are simple to fix, except for that fact they are politically unacceptable. It's more acceptable to let the system to collapse then to actually fix it.
Capitalism is the greatest system in the world! America is #1 in the world for a reason my friend.
 
The so-called 2017 "Trump tax cut" was funded by radically increasing taxes on those firms performing R&D, starting with tax year 2022. This was intentionally structured to hide this from business and industry, which was generally shocked to learn in 2023 that 90% of their R&D Expenses now suddenly became taxable Income.

Every major US corporation, defense contractors, Chamber of Commerce, industry groups, AICPA, etc. lobbied hard to correct this. In fact, in 2024 that corrective legislation passed the House by an overwhelming Bipartisan majority, 357-70. Yet, Senate Republicans voted to kill the bill because they thought they'd regain the majority in 2025 and get even more of what they wanted. Their political judgment was correct (their highest loyalty) to the detriment of US economic and security interests.

Under those rules, it made a lot more sense for me to dissolve my R&D firm, doing work solicited by DOD and NASA for decades, than to pay $3 in Tax for every $1 in real R&D income earned (not kidding; so crazy people don't even believe it, unless you are a CPA! ).

The current House Tax bill has a weak provision to reverse this 2017 tax change (not permanent, not retroactive). But for the thousands of skilled R&D workers and firms, its much too little, too late. It took decades to develop that national capability; who would want to recreate it now given this sad and cynical history?
 
The US has been a joke since the 70s and our debt is about to be the end of the great American empire.
Yes, the U.S. has faced economic ups and downs since the 1970s, but it's remained number one for a reason, its innovation, economic strength, and global influence.

While the national debt is a serious concern, the country has consistently shown resilience and adaptability. History proves that empires evolve rather than collapse overnight.
 
Yes, the U.S. has faced economic ups and downs since the 1970s, but it's remained number one for a reason, its innovation, economic strength, and global influence.

While the national debt is a serious concern, the country has consistently shown resilience and adaptability. History proves that empires evolve rather than collapse overnight.
Its innovation in what, making housing unaffordable, lower wages relative to the consumer price index, turning everything into a subscription model while hardly producing anything physical? Or my current favorite, charging 10x as much for the same drugs than in other countries?

Our infustructure is failing and our homeless population is skyrocketing. We were great, but this trend has been going on regardless of who was in office in the last 50 years.
 
We'd be WAY better off to close the IRS and add a national sales tax that EVERYONE pays. Do away with it all....burn the IRS to the ground. The ignorant want to call ICE the "Gestapo/SS" but in the USA the real Gestapo/SS is the IRS! No other government organization has the power to take all your assets, garnish future earnings and toss you in jail.
so you hate poor people then
 
Its innovation in what, making housing unaffordable, lower wages relative to the consumer price index, turning everything into a subscription model while hardly producing anything physical? Or my current favorite, charging 10x as much for the same drugs than in other countries?

Our infustructure is failing and our homeless population is skyrocketing. We were great, but this trend has been going on regardless of who was in office in the last 50 years.
I get where the frustration’s coming from, there are absolutely serious systemic issues we need to address. But dismissing all innovation because of the challenges we face ignores the progress happening every day. Innovation isn’t just about gadgets or streaming services. It’s about medical breakthroughs, clean energy advances, and accessibility tools that are changing lives for the better.

Yes, housing affordability and healthcare pricing are real concerns....but they’re symptoms of broader economic and policy failures, not innovation itself. Blaming innovation for societal problems is like blaming science for pollution. The solution lies in how we use our progress, not in abandoning it.

If we really want to be great again, maybe we should stop romanticizing the past and start demanding accountability and smart, inclusive policy today.
 
so you hate poor people then
I do not think that is what he implied. The goal of discussing a sales tax model isn’t to harm anyone, it’s to explore alternative systems that might be more transparent or efficient. That said, sales taxes can disproportionately affect lower income individuals if not thoughtfully designed. That’s why any serious proposal would have to include safeguards, like exemptions for essential goods, or a basic income offset to avoid regressive impacts.

It's totally fair to ask tough questions. But, talk solutions, not assumptions and dismissiveness.
 
so you hate poor people then
Of course not! That's the beauty of America, ANYONE can do better if they try. It's been shown over and over and over literally MILLIONS of times. What I do hate is LAZY people though. If a person chooses to spend their life complaining, pretending to be a victim and blaming others for their situation, then they will reap what they sow.
 
I love how a tax being enforced by the government, and write offs no longer being able to support additional jobs, is being decried as "le ebil capitalizms".

All the self awareness of a potato......
 
The US has been a joke since the 70s and our debt is about to be the end of the great American empire.
Well, now that we have an actual president instead of a walking veg, America is addressing the debt. Have you been keeping up, seems not?

What happens when we do attack the debt? THE LEFT COMPLAINS, CRIES AND RIOTS ABOUT IT. lololololol
 
I do not think that is what he implied. The goal of discussing a sales tax model isn’t to harm anyone, it’s to explore alternative systems that might be more transparent or efficient. That said, sales taxes can disproportionately affect lower income individuals if not thoughtfully designed. That’s why any serious proposal would have to include safeguards, like exemptions for essential goods, or a basic income offset to avoid regressive impacts.

It's totally fair to ask tough questions. But, talk solutions, not assumptions and dismissiveness.

The FairTax plan has all the safeguards built in.

The biggest problem is that none of the alternatives to the current federal taxation scheme in the US will ever be implemented.
 
The FairTax plan has all the safeguards built in.

The biggest problem is that none of the alternatives to the current federal taxation scheme in the US will ever be implemented.
Just because the FairTax plan claims to have safeguards doesn't mean it's the best or only solution. There are plenty of other proposed tax reforms that address different concerns, some might even be more effective. As for alternatives never being implemented, that kind of defeatist attitude isn't helpful. Plenty of major policy changes have happened throughout history, despite initial resistance.
 
Yes it is; that's literally the entire point. That's also why most of the rest of the world (aside from a few areas where the US has held sway, like Chile) has abandoned the US's implementation of Capitalism for alternatives (either Socialism or the European Capitalistic model).

The saddest part is the US's structural problems are simple to fix, except for that fact they are politically unacceptable. It's more acceptable to let the system to collapse then to actually fix it.

No I don't think you actually understand the point. Greed is not a system, nor a failing component of "U.S. capitalism", it is a human failing that knows no borders. As for "European capitalism", a better description would be government controlled capitalism, which for all practical purposes is a dressed up name for socialism/communism. Couple that with the insane speech laws (particularly England and Germany) and other limits on personal freedoms, and you have the answer as to why it's difficult to fix.
One man's meat is another man's poison.
 
The US has been a joke since the 70s and our debt is about to be the end of the great American empire.

Exactly. In 71, Nixon took us off the gold standard, which started in 72. Now, money is printed with nothing to back it, except "the good faith of the government" LOL
 
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