> First of all, the people who were manually toiling are getting laid off
I was referring to the sort of work that just never gets funded. Cleanup, refactoring.
If you have business critical toil being done by people who now get laid off, that is obviously a cause for concern.
> the "hard part" isn't writing the code but working with other teams to organize or roll out the changes. But since we can use AI, management is suddenly interested.
So AI has convinced your management to let you pay down tech debt? Seems like a win.