Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Business

Nestle says to cut 16,000 jobs worldwide over next two years

The headquarters of Swiss food giant Nestle, which is pushing to save billions of dollars in the next two years
The headquarters of Swiss food giant Nestle, which is pushing to save billions of dollars in the next two years - Copyright AFP Pierrick YVON
The headquarters of Swiss food giant Nestle, which is pushing to save billions of dollars in the next two years - Copyright AFP Pierrick YVON

Nestle, the Swiss food giant whose brands include Nespresso coffee and Perrier water, will eliminate 16,000 jobs worldwide over the next two years, its new chief executive said on Thursday.

“The world is changing, and Nestle needs to change faster,” Philipp Navratil, who took the reins of the multinational in early September, said in a statement.

That included making “hard but necessary decisions to reduce headcount”, he said.

Navratil spoke as the company published nine-month figures showing sales down by 1.9 percent to 65.9 billion Swiss francs ($83 billion).

The layoffs include 12,000 white-collar jobs, saving the company one billion Swiss francs — which it said was double what had been previously planned — on top of 4,000 job cuts already underway in production and the supply chain.

Navratil said Nestle was increasing its savings target to three billion Swiss francs by the end of 2027, up from the previous target of 2.5 billion.

The food giant, which owns more than 2,000 brands — including Kit Kat chocolate bars and Purina dog food — experienced a turbulent September, with the dismissal of its previous CEO over an office relationship.

That was followed by the earlier-than-expected departure of its chairman. 

Financial analysts hope that Navratil will succeed in restoring stability to the group, which has seen its growth falter since 2022. Nestle has also been rocked by a scandal surrounding its bottled water that began in France in 2024.

Organic sales growth amounted to 3.3 percent in the first nine months of 2025, driven by price increases of 2.8 percent.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Social Media

Hashtags such as "fake space" and "fake NASA" have gained traction online since NASA's lunar fly-by sent astronauts farther from Earth.

Business

Anthropic postponing the release of its new AI model Claude Mythos.

World

Insitutions including museums held Artemis splashdown parties, and some teachers integrated the launch into their lessons.

World

NASA official Lori Glaze says after Artemis II returns to Earth that 'all of industry' needs to work toward Moon landing - Copyright AFP...