From Silicon Forest To Silicon Graveyard: My Thoughts On Intel’s Mass Layoffs

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Intel’s Workforce Continues To Shrink At An Alarming Rate.

Story Highlight
  • Intel’s workforce numbers have been shrinking year-on-year with 15,900 employees terminated in 2024 including 3,000 Oregon employees.
  • Following the appointment of Lip-Bu Tan as CEO of Intel on 12th March 2025, the company has announced another 15-20% staff cut with emphasis on trimming its production team in the interest of “organisational efficiency”.
  • With just over $7B trapped in yet-to-be-disbursed state and federal funding, Intel’s future remains uncertain, and the only question that remains is if Team Blue will be able to increase business productivity and efficacy to stage what will certainly be considered a miraculous comeback.

To begin with, I’ve been covering tech layoffs for years, but Intel’s latest cuts hit differently. 

This isn’t just trimming fat—this is corporate self-amputation on a terrifying scale.

For starters, about 3,000 employees working in Intel’s Silicon Forest Oregon facilities, the heart of its U.S. operations, have already been axed prior to the start of 2025 through layoffs, buyouts, and attrition, leaving just 20,000 still standing.

Moving on, according to an internal email obtained by Oregon Live (and verified by four employees), Intel is slashing another 15-20% of its global production workforce—8,170 to 10,890 people—with no voluntary buyouts, no sugarcoating, just straight-up termination. 

This isn’t just another tech layoff. This is Intel in crisis mode. And if they’re not careful, this could backfire catastrophically.

Intel’s Shrinking Workforce: A Disturbing Trend

Let’s rewind. 

As of December 28, 2024, Intel employed 108,900 people—down from 124,800 the year before. 

Can Intel afford to layoff any more of its employees with crucial (rumoured) CPUs floating on the horizon like the hotly anticipated Core Ultra 9 'Nova Lake-S'? (Image Credits - Tech4Gamers)
Can Intel afford to layoff any more of its employees with crucial (rumoured) CPUs floating on the horizon like the hotly anticipated Core Ultra 9 ‘Nova Lake-S’?

That’s 15,900 jobs gone in 12 months.  Now, they’re cutting another 8,170 to 10,890.

Intel has 15 wafer fabs across 10 global locations, including:

  • Hillsboro, Oregon (Silicon Forest)
  • Leixlip, Ireland
  • Chandler, Arizona
  • Kiryat Gat, Israel

Furthermore, the company claims roughly half its workforce (54,450 people) handles production and fab operations. Meanwhile, the other half’s appointed in R&D, design, sales, administration, and other business units.

And here’s the kicker: None of these divisions are safe.

No Buyouts, No Mercy: Intel’s Ruthless Approach

Unlike past layoffs, Intel isn’t offering voluntary departures. Instead, they’re selectively terminating employees to “reduce management layers and bureaucracy.”

Why? Well, this is all part of newly-appointed CEO Lip-Bu Tan’s plan to restore Intel to its former glory by eliminating “organisational bureaucracy” and establishing a flatter hierarchical structure. 

To quote the new CEO, “I’m a big believer in the philosophy that the best leaders get the most done with the fewest people.”

Who’s getting cut?

  • Factory floor workers
  • Tool operators
  • Support personnel
  • Middle management

Who’s (probably) safe?

  • Engineers working on Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography (EUV) and High-NA (Numerical Aperture) EUV (critical for next-gen chips)
  • Top-performing R&D staff
The Core Ultra 200 Series codenamed 'Arrow Lake-S' represents Intel's latest slew of consumer-grade desktop CPUs. (Image Credits - Intel)
Intel really can’t afford to lose any of its highly technical production staff as those employees are directly responsible for the creation of Team Blue’s next-generation CPUs like the Intel Core Ultra 200 Series codenamed ‘Arrow Lake-S’. (Image Credits – Intel)

But even that’s not guaranteed. If a process gets automated, even EUV specialists could be on the chopping block.

The Hidden Cost Of Layoffs: A Ticking Time Bomb

On paper, layoffs save money. 

But in reality? They wreck operational efficiency.

The Domino Effect:

  1. Fewer workers = slower response times to equipment failures.
  2. Slower responses = more fab downtime.
  3. More downtime = missed production deadlines.
  4. Missed deadlines = lost contracts.
  5. Lost contracts = even more layoffs.

And let’s not forget the human cost. The remaining employees will be overworked, stressed, and more likely to quit—creating a vicious cycle of turnover and instability.

Intel is playing with fire. Cut too deep, and the entire operation collapses.

The CHIPS Act Crisis: Will Intel Lose Billions In Funding?

Here’s where things get really messy.

Intel was promised $7.86 billion from the CHIPS Act, but so far, they’ve only received $1 billion. 

The rest? Stuck in political limbo.

The Trump Factor: Will Intel Get Along?

Trump’s newly-instated administration has made a series of drastic announcements including hiking trade tariffs worldwide. 

Considering that the $7.86 billion CHIPS Act’s terms were finalised by the Biden-Harris administration, it’s quite possible that the new administration might revoke the remaining CHIPS funding if it deems Intel to be unworthy of it. 

That’s $6.86 billion—gone.

Intel’s Layoffs: Oregon’s $115 Million Gamble

The state pledged $115 million in tax breaks and grants—but only if Intel meets hiring and revenue targets. 

However, with these layoffs, those targets just got a lot harder to hit.

If Intel fails, Oregon could pull funding entirely, leaving Intel in an even deeper financial hole.

Is Intel Sacrificing Its Future For Short-Term Survival?

This isn’t just about layoffs. This is about Intel’s survival.

  • AMD is dominating in CPUs.
  • Nvidia owns AI.
  • TSMC is years ahead in fabrication.

Intel’s response? Slash jobs, pray for funding, and hope for the best.

But here’s the brutal truth: You can’t cut your way to innovation. 

If Intel keeps gutting its workforce, there won’t be enough talent left to stage a comeback.

The next 12 months will decide Intel’s fate. And right now? The odds aren’t looking good.

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