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OpenAI Foundation commits $250 million to workers displaced by the tech it builds

ByMicah AbiodunMicah Abiodun
3 mins read
OpenAI Foundation commits $250 million to workers displaced by the tech it builds
  • The OpenAI Foundation is committing $250 million to help workers and economies cope with AI-driven job displacement through grants, research, and direct programs.
  • Block cut 4,000 jobs, and Standard Chartered announced 7,000 cuts, both naming AI efficiency as the reason.
  • The foundation did not announce a specific date, but says the first programs are expected before the end of 2026.

The OpenAI Foundation unveiled on Wednesday plans to invest $250 million into grants, collaboration initiatives, and other efforts aimed at helping people cope with AI-related job displacements. This is the first-ever OpenAI spending initiative targeting the issue of automation-related labor displacement.

Three main priorities guide the allocation of the funds as per the foundation’s statements; conducting research on how AI impacts employment, giving out immediate assistance to communities facing job losses, and experimenting with policies to ensure more widespread sharing of AI profits.

What the $250 million will fund

Per the announcement, specific programs have not been named, but the first initiatives are expected before year-end.

On research, the foundation wants better measurement infrastructure for labor markets globally, tracking employment, wages, and corporate behavior. It flagged particular interest in low- and middle-income countries where AI could widen inequality or expand access to services, per Quartz.

For direct worker support, the foundation cited gaps in unemployment insurance, wage-loss protection, and retraining pipelines. Traditional retraining programs have produced inconsistent results, the foundation acknowledged. It also said workers should have greater input into how AI tools are deployed at their jobs.

Policywise, the OpenAI Foundation would like to translate concepts into practical designs. It outlined several promising models to consider, such as reducing taxes on labor and putting them on capital; windfall profits plans; and sovereign wealth funds.

Norway’s Government Pension Fund and Alaska’s Permanent Fund were cited as reference points. The foundation also expressed interest in AI-powered economic simulations that project how labor markets might evolve as AI capabilities expand.

Block cut 40%, Standard Chartered is cutting 7,000 positions

AI-powered tools for coding, marketing copy, and customer service have moved from demos into production over the past year, and companies are acting on the savings.

Block CEO Jack Dorsey cut 4,000 employees in February, roughly 40% of the company’s workforce. “We’re already seeing that the intelligence tools we’re creating and using, paired with smaller and flatter teams, are enabling a new way of working which fundamentally changes what it means to build and run a company,” Dorsey wrote on X. Block shares jumped 25% in after-hours trading after the announcement

Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters announced last week that the bank would eliminate over 7,000 positions by 2030.

In some cases, we are replacing lower-value human capital with the financial capital and the investment capital we are deploying.

Bill Winters

Amazon cut 16,000 jobs in January. Meta began shedding 8,000 roles. The tech industry alone cut nearly 80,000 positions in Q1 2026, with roughly half tied to AI, according to industry-tracking data.

According to OpenAI Foundation, “The rate of change we are seeing means that our window for getting this right is shorter than we are accustomed to and the consequences of failing to do so are dire.”

The foundation sits on $130 billion in OpenAI stock

OpenAI’s corporate restructuring last year left the nonprofit with a 26% ownership stake in the company’s commercial arm. The value of the stake was estimated to be around $130 billion, thus making the foundation one of the largest charities in terms of assets.

According to Reuters, OpenAI pledged to give away not less than $1 billion via the foundation in the next twelve months for projects related to artificial intelligence in life sciences and communities.

The $250 million labor program falls under this commitment, but it marks the first time that a particular amount of money has been allocated for workforce disruption.

The foundation said it is hiring staff to run certain programs directly rather than operating purely as a pass-through for grants. Funding will reach nonprofits and a broader set of organizations beyond the traditional philanthropic pipeline.

OpenAI CEO of Applications Fidji Simo acknowledged that AI could concentrate wealth and power if its benefits are not widely distributed. Her warning echoes Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei’s earlier projection that AI could eliminate half of all entry-level white-collar jobs within one to five years.

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FAQs

How much is OpenAI's foundation spending on worker displacement?

The OpenAI Foundation is committing an initial $250 million across grants, partnerships, and hands-on programs aimed at helping workers and economies navigate AI-driven disruption.

Where does the OpenAI Foundation get its money?

A corporate restructuring in 2025 gave the nonprofit a 26% ownership stake in OpenAI's for-profit entity, valued at $130 billion at the time, making it one of the world's largest charities.

When will the OpenAI Foundation announce specific programs?

The foundation said its first initiatives will be announced before the end of 2026, and that it is currently building a team to manage some programs directly rather than relying solely on outside grant recipients.

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Micah Abiodun

Micah Abiodun

Micah Abiodun makes good use of his Environmental Engineering and Management (MSc) at Tallinn University of Technology (TalTech) to polish content and price prediction news at Cryptopolitan. Now on his 7th year in the crypto media space, he covers major cryptos, altcoins, DeFi, stablecoins, macro trends, and emerging tech.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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