China court rules companies can’t replace employees with AI to cut costs
A Chinese court has ruled that companies cannot legally dismiss employees solely to replace them with cost-saving artificial intelligence tools, setting a clear boundary on how far firms can go in using automation to reduce labour costs.
- Hangzhou court rules companies cannot fire workers solely to replace them with AI, rejecting automation as a valid ground under labour law.
- Tribunal finds dismissal unlawful after firm cut employee’s role and pay following AI adoption, orders additional compensation.
- Ruling comes as global firms cut jobs amid AI uptake, while the U.S. expands AI deployment across classified defence systems.
On April 30, the Hangzhou Intermediate People’s Court issued the ruling while hearing a dispute involving a senior tech worker, surnamed Zhou, who said his employer tried to demote him after introducing AI systems into its workflow.
Zhou joined the company in November 2022 as a quality assurance supervisor, earning a monthly salary of about $3,500. His responsibilities included optimising AI-generated outputs and filtering sensitive content.
Over time, those tasks were absorbed by large language models. The company then attempted to move Zhou into a lower-ranking role with a 40% pay cut, reducing his salary to about $2,100. Zhou declined the reassignment.
The company subsequently terminated his employment, citing organisational restructuring and reduced staffing needs. It offered him a severance package of about $43,000, which he challenged through arbitration.
An arbitration panel found the dismissal unlawful and supported Zhou’s request for additional compensation.
The employer then escalated the dispute, first filing a lawsuit in a district court and later appealing to the Hangzhou Intermediate People’s Court. At the centre of the case was whether replacing an employee with AI qualifies as a “major change in objective circumstances” under China’s Labour Contract Law, a condition that can justify termination.
The court rejected that argument. It held that AI-driven automation does not meet the threshold of a “major change,” and said the company failed to demonstrate that retaining Zhou had become impossible. Judges also noted that the alternative role offered to him was not a reasonable reassignment, reinforcing the conclusion that the termination was unlawful.
The ruling arrives as companies worldwide continue to cut jobs while increasing reliance on AI tools powered by large language models. Major firms, including Oracle, Meta, Amazon, Epic Games, Spotify, and Gemini, have collectively reduced headcount by thousands in the first five months of the year.
China draws a line as U.S. accelerates AI adoption in defence
While China’s courts are tightening safeguards around AI-led job cuts, other jurisdictions such as the United States are moving quickly to expand the use of artificial intelligence across critical sectors.
As reported by crypto.news, on May 1 the U.S. Department of Defense stepped up its AI strategy, signing new agreements with several major technology firms to deploy advanced systems across classified military networks.
According to a statement released Friday, Nvidia, Microsoft, Reflection AI, and Amazon Web Services have entered into agreements to provide operational capabilities. Two defence officials familiar with the matter also confirmed the deals.
These companies join a growing roster of partners that already includes SpaceX, OpenAI, and Google, all of which have committed to supplying AI tools for classified use. The announcement also serves as the first formal confirmation from the Pentagon of its agreement with Google, which had surfaced in earlier reports.
“These agreements accelerate the transformation toward establishing the United States military as an AI-first fighting force,” the department said.