
Somewhere right now, a CFO is presenting a slide that frames it as: tokens or headcount. Allocate to AI infrastructure, reduce salary costs, reinvest in capability. The maths is clean. The logic looks compelling. The slide is wrong.
The phrase “tokens or humans” has entered the corporate vocabulary fast. CNBC ran it as a headline in May 2026 and they were right to, because it captures something real: organisations are now making explicit choices between paying for people and paying for AI. But the framing treats it as a resource allocation problem. It isn’t. It’s a transformation governance problem, and most organisations are making the call before they understand what they are trading away.
The Numbers Look Better Than They Are
More than 142,000 tech jobs have been cut in 2026 already. Amazon, Meta, Salesforce, Block, Cloudflare. Executives are public about the logic: AI agents handle what humans used to, smaller teams move faster, capital gets redirected to infrastructure. The numbers are real.
So are these: over 80% of companies using AI showed no productivity benefit in a February 2026 study. Uber burned through its entire annual AI coding budget in four months. Microsoft cancelled a large tranche of Claude Code licences after six months. Productivity gains in controlled studies can be significant. In most real-world settings, the gains are a fraction of what those studies suggest, if they materialise at all.
Token prices are falling, yes. Gartner projects a 90% reduction by 2030. But Goldman Sachs projects a 24-fold increase in enterprise token consumption over the same period. The unit cost goes down; the total bill goes up. Companies reporting their AI budgets exhausted in one or two months are not outliers. They are the pattern.
The trade-off that looks like a saving is, in many cases, a substitution of one cost for a more volatile, harder-to-govern one.
You’re Cutting the Wrong People
Here is the part executives are not discussing on those slides.
When organisations reduce headcount to fund AI infrastructure, they do not cut at random. They cut operational staff, programme delivery roles, change management functions, middle management layers. These are the roles that look like friction. In a spreadsheet, they are the easiest cost to justify removing.
In a transformation, they are the load-bearing walls.
The tacit knowledge that keeps a complex programme on track does not live in a document or a prompt. It lives in the people who have navigated the politics three times before, who know which stakeholders will quietly block a decision, who understand why the last attempt failed. AI does not have that context. More importantly, it cannot build it. It can only work with what you give it.
When transformation programmes stall, which they do with regularity, the most common cause is not a lack of technology. It is a lack of people who know how to move organisations through change. Cutting those people to fund AI tools that have not yet delivered consistent productivity returns is not a strategy. It is a bet. And it is a bet being made with institutional knowledge that cannot be easily rebuilt.
The Governance Question Nobody Is Asking
Most boardroom conversations about tokens versus humans are efficiency conversations. They should be risk conversations.
Specifically: what is the reversibility of this decision? Hiring back experienced programme delivery professionals, change managers, and technology integrators in a tighter labour market is slow and expensive. The talent you let go walks straight into competitor organisations or into consulting. You do not get it back on demand.
Meanwhile, the AI infrastructure you are funding with those savings is subject to vendor pricing changes, model deprecation cycles, and adoption curves that are far less predictable than a salary line. The White House’s own March 2026 AI governance framework acknowledged the workforce transition risk. State lawmakers introduced hundreds of AI-related bills in 2025. Political and regulatory pressure is accelerating.
Boards approving headcount reductions to fund AI should be asking: what is our recovery plan if the productivity gains do not arrive on the timeline assumed? Few are.
What Good Decision-Making Looks Like Here
The organisations getting this right are not choosing between tokens and humans. They are sequencing the decisions differently.
They are deploying AI where the productivity case is proven and measurable: customer-facing automation, code assistance, data analysis, routine administrative work. And they are preserving the human capability needed to execute the transformation that makes AI integration actually work.
They are building governance frameworks around AI spend with the same discipline applied to capital programmes: defined outcomes, stage gates, budget controls, and exit criteria if results do not materialise. They are not treating AI infrastructure as a guaranteed return.
They are also being honest internally about what is driving the headcount decisions. If cost pressure is the real driver and AI adoption is the justification, that is worth naming clearly. Obscuring the actual motivation behind a technology narrative creates cultural damage that outlasts the short-term saving.
The Slide Does Not Run the Programme
The “tokens or humans” framing will stick around because it captures something real about the economics of 2026. But it is a simplification that is costing organisations more than they realise.
The numbers are not the decision. The decision is how you get from where you are to where you need to be. That still requires people who know what they are doing.








