Will Other Chinese Tech Giants Follow JD.com’s No-Layoff AI Promise?

In the era of artificial intelligence revolutionising industries across the globe, one assertion stands out in China’s tech landscape. JD.com founder Liu Qiangdong has recently made a public pledge to safeguard his company’s 900,000 employees against the threat of job displacement by AI, a pledge that has helped to shift the national debate on the future of employment in the era of artificial intelligence.

The JD.com No-Layoff Promise Explained

At a recent employee town hall meeting, Liu Qiangdong directly spoke to his employees, saying he will “do everything possible to protect employment for hundreds of thousands of personnel, including blue-collar workers.” He went even further, stating that the JD.com no-layoff commitment implies that the retailer “will not lay off one frontline worker replaced by a machine.”

This is no easy affair. Considered as “China’s Amazon”, JD.com is one of the country’s largest companies in terms of employees, which includes people from a variety of professions such as couriers, store associates, AI trainers, and robot maintenance engineers. The company is working on such innovations as unmanned warehouses, drone delivery, autonomous vehicles, and self-driving convenience stores. Despite the push towards automation, Liu says human workers will not be casualties of technological change.

Why the JD.com No-Layoff Policy Matters Now

The JD.com no-layoff policy comes at an opportune time. In 2026, tech firms in China have been speeding up their layoffs as they strive to adopt AI technologies. Earlier this year, ByteDance was accused of making workers anxious due to its personnel cuts and the restructuring of the industry’s workforce in the field of AI. As for the rest of the world, tech firms from San Francisco startups to Silicon Valley giants are cutting staff by leaps and bounds using AI restructuring as cover for their mass layoffs — and doing so with little notice to those who might be impacted.

In this context, JD.com’s no-layoff guarantee is a conscious move to counterbalance. It’s a sign that automation and jobs aren’t at odds — and that it’s a question of whether China’s other tech giants will do the same.

The Legal Landscape: Courts Back Workers

The JD.com no-layoff promise also comes in the wake of a landmark Chinese court ruling. A tech company was found guilty in late April by a Hangzhou court of illegally dismissing an employee for using an AI program in his place. The development of artificial intelligence technology should be used to liberate labour, advance employment and enhance the living standards of the people, an implicit warning from the Hangzhou Intermediate People’s Court to all employers.

This decision does not preclude the feasibility of technological progress under the Labour Code; the employer is allowed to seek technology upgrading under the Labour Code, but it must consider the legitimate rights of the workers. The legal signal is not only a positioning statement, but also a smart legal risk management.

Will Alibaba, Tencent, and ByteDance Follow?

The pressure has now been turned on China’s other tech giants. Alibaba AI’s restructuring has been in progress, with the company’s business units being reorganised and the company investing heavily in its own Large Language Models. Other than outright cuts, Tencent has been reallocating employees across its ranks to work on AI products. In contrast, the cuts at ByteDance have been selective, involving specific non-AI teams and expanding AI-related divisions.

None of them has pledged in their strategies something similar to JD’s about not letting workers go. Their AI strategy seems to be more effective than pledging a job for life in China’s technology-based firms. However, things might start looking different because there is a recent court case that supported workers’ interest and public sentiment turned against the axe men.

Nowadays, China is facing an increase in job layoffs in the field due to the rapid development of technologies. The government of this country has always been keen on protecting its citizens from job losses, so the enterprises that promise protection publicly will receive reputation bonuses from the government.

The Broader AI Workforce Effect in China

In China, the effect of the use of artificial intelligence is not only related to technology companies but also concerns other spheres. Many citizens working in logistics, retail, and manufacturing industries are among the most vulnerable to changes brought by artificial intelligence technologies. It is a sign that those companies implementing AI the most are those that currently have the healthiest combination of human and AI employees and thus reduce their staff.

The JD.com no-layoff policy debunks this belief. China’s most automated business can say ‘no job should be lost to AI’ and give some credibility to the argument that the fear of mass job losses to AI is not always justified.

Conclusion

The JD.com no-layoff policy extends beyond a company’s commitment; it’s an industry challenge. But as the tech sector in China keeps cutting, and AI companies in China continue to make mass layoffs, JD.com has made it clear: they’ll stick with what they’ve got. It will be seen if Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance and others follow suit. However, the pressure of laws, public eyes and reputation games has made the JD.com model one that the Chinese tech industry cannot afford to ignore.

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Kritika

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