Thousands more may have to go at the network equipment manufacturer as management look for additional cost savings of 10 billion Swedish kronor (US$1.2 billion), the newspaper said, citing anonymous sources.
Ericsson had around 115,000 staff in April, 17,000 of them in Sweden
A spokeswoman declined to discuss Tuesday's news report, saying the company does not comment on rumors and speculation.
Ericsson is facing increasing competition from a more focused Nokia, which swallowed its Franco-American rival, Alcatel-Lucent, earlier this year, and especially from Chinese vendors such as Huawei Technologies or ZTE. It's a critical time for wireless infrastructure vendors and their carrier customers, as they taper off investment in fourth-generation networks in preparation for the next, still largely undefined, generation of technology.
Hans Westberg, Ericsson's President and CEO, announced a restructuring in April, after disappointing sales and profit growth in the first quarter. The wave of management changes will take effect on July 1, as the company reorganizes around two networking business units, one for products and one for services, and two cloud business units, again for products and services. Ericsson is also focusing centralized sales teams on media and on industrial customers. The new organization will be "leaner, more fit for purpose," Vestberg said.
The company is already two years into a three-year program to slice 9 billion kronor off its annual costs, and while that program is on track, the company has already begun taking additional cost-cutting measures, according to the spokeswoman.
"We are adapting our operations to current mobile broadband project volumes, which primarily impacts service delivery," she said via email.