Wal-Mart means low-priced goods and good jobs

Star Tribune: Wal-Mart means low-priced goods and good jobs

"Wal-Mart hammered by judge," shouted a front-page Star Tribune headline earlier this month. The Dakota County judge — responding to a class-action assault on the giant retailer — labeled Wal-Mart "dehumanizing" and set it up for a possible $2 billion penalty.

Many Minnesotans probably shrugged. What else is new? The story seemed consistent with charges we've heard for years: Wal-Mart exploits its workers by paying skinflint wages and skimping on health insurance. Not to mention driving legions of mom-and-pop stores out of business.

With such a reputation for ruthlessness, Wal-Mart must be struggling to find workers, right?

Yet when the company opened a new store in St. Paul's Midway area in May 2004, about 6,000 applicants vied for 325 job openings, according to Joyce Niska, the store's acting manager in 2005. That, too, was nothing new. For years, people have beaten down the doors to work at Wal-Mart.

Wal-Mart's more than 1.3 million American employees aren't stupid. …

…Wal-Mart's combination of rock-bottom prices, quality and convenience — it offers a dizzying array of household staples under one roof — appeals strongly to shoppers who need to stretch their dollars. Estimates of the average family's annual savings from shopping at Wal-Mart range from $900 to $2,300, depending on the study you consult.

W. Michael Cox, chief economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, summed it up this way speaking to the New York Times: "Wal-Mart is the greatest thing that ever happened to low-income Americans." …

…For example, Wal-Mart pioneered the "big-box," large-scale retail model that is now a fixture of the American landscape, writes Vedder. Its efficiencies sprang not from beating down workers, but from technological and logistical innovations, including electronic data interchange and wireless barcode scanning, to streamline operations. Savings are passed on to consumers in the form of lower prices.

The ripple effects are profound. Grocery prices drop an average of 10 to 15 percent in markets that Wal-Mart has entered, according to analysts cited by the New York Times.

For these and other reasons, economists credit Wal-Mart with single-handedly increasing American productivity and substantially reducing inflation in recent years.

Today, Wal-Mart's innovations continue.

In September 2006, for example, the company began offering a month's supply of more than 300 generic drugs for $4 each — about the cost of a gallon of milk. Chains such as Kroger's and Target responded by lowering their prices. In March, Wal-Mart announced that its new program had saved consumers $1.03 billion in about 18 months. …

…Anti-globalization folks — the sort who used to vilify McDonald's — routinely denounce the company, of course. The main force behind the anti-Wal-Mart crusade, however, is organized labor. Wal-Mart isn't unionized, and the United Food and Commercial Workers has repeatedly struck out in its efforts to change that. In response, the UFCW has joined the Service Employees International Union in launching anti-Wal-Mart websites and striving to turn public opinion against the company.

Interestingly, the folks who hate Wal-Mart are often the sort who usually make a big deal about how much they care for low-income people. They make a mistake when they turn a blind eye on the achievements of this powerhouse for the poor.

Related: Is Wal-Mart Good for the American Working Class?


Comments

9 responses to “Wal-Mart means low-priced goods and good jobs”

  1. VanSkaamper Avatar
    VanSkaamper

    ***The main force behind the anti-Wal-Mart crusade, however, is organized labor.***
    This is really all you need to know. It’s been obvious for a long, long time that Walmart benefits lower income people, both through low prices and jobs. It’s indicative of the real agenda of those who claim to be advocates for the poor who also go after Walmart at every turn. They’re sucking up to their union $upporters, nothing more.

  2. Unfortunately, Wal-Mart has at times been their own worst enemy. They need adversaries to keep them honest.
    That said, I don’t think most folks appreciate what a profound affect Wal-Mart has had on keeping prices down on staple items like food and clothing.
    Apart from labor unions, another group that has tended to be anti-Wal-Mart is the intellectual/artistic crowd. Such big box stores violate there sense of what shopping aesthetics should be about. The poor have a more basic set of priorities.

  3. VanSkaamper Avatar
    VanSkaamper

    …another group that has tended to be anti-Wal-Mart is the intellectual/artistic crowd. Such big box stores violate there sense of what shopping aesthetics should be about. The poor have a more basic set of priorities.
    You’re right…but it’s so absurd that it’s worth mentioning only to note how far it is we’ve drifted politically when a group of aesthetes can get any traction at all opposing a store because it’s ugly.
    Why is it anyone’s business what a Walmart (or any other big box store) looks like? If you don’t like it, don’t shop there…but don’t try to shut it down or chase it out of town deny lower income people access.
    I’ll confess right now, before BLOG and everybody that I have purchased items at Walmart. I was glad it was there. It was convenient, the prices were good, and the service was efficient and friendly. This is more than I can say for my local DMV or any other government agency…which are also dehumanizing and ugly, BTW…
    That said, I wouldn’t choose to have a wedding reception there. But so what?
    Let the intellectuals and artisans live in their Walmart-free urban villages, pay too much at Restoration Hardware, Starbucks, or wherever else they feel comfortable. That’s their choice. But please let the rest of the country exercise theirs.

  4. Okay, I’ll buy the argument that Wal-Mart’s low prices are helpful to poor folks, but I’m definitely unconvinced that it offers “good jobs”. The only point made in that argument is that four years ago, “about 6,000 applicants vied for 325 job openings”. That does not mean Wal-Mart (necessarily) has good jobs. It only means that the other options are worse.
    It’s like inferring from pictures of refugees lined up by hundreds behind aid trucks that the UN serves gourmet food. Nope, it’s just better than starving to death.

  5. VanSkaamper Avatar
    VanSkaamper

    Yes. 6000 applicants for 325 jobs. Sounds like it definitely sucks. They must all be fools.

  6. I think the question is what qualifies as a good job. What is your measure?
    If the measure is being able to raise a family of four on a beginning Wal-Mart salary as the only paycheck, then probably not. But is this the reality for many workers seeking these jobs? Many of these workers are low skilled folks straight out of high school trying to a foot on the bottom rung of the economic ladder. Others are folks looking for income to supplement the family budget. I’d suggest that for them Wal-Mart is a wonderful opportunity. Wal-Mart jobs are great jobs for a large number of folks in various life circumstances and not so hot for others. That’s how I see it.

  7. VanSkaamper Avatar
    VanSkaamper

    That’s very well said, Michael.

  8. One of these days, I’m going to join a Wal-Mart protest with a sign reading “Down with low prices!!! Down with wide selections!!!”
    “shopping aesthetics”??? What in tarnation is that? I remember the days down at the general store, sittin’ around the pickle barrel, chewin’ terbaccy, talking ’bout the ijits in gummint. The floor was bare wood, well-worn. Ol’ Sam, the shopkeeper, would sometimes grunt “Hi” when you came in (but always “Good morning, Miss Pringle”). And his old yaller dog would always seem to prefer layin’ right in the front door.
    “Shoppin’ es-thetics” is for Boston nabobs, not us reg’lr folk.

  9. My point (that I clearly did not make well) is simply this: I’m open to the idea of that Wal-Mart provides “good” jobs, but so far no is making that argument. They are simply saying that lots of people want these jobs. Agreed.
    But saying that Popular = Good does not work for me. Lots of things are popular that are not good: Drugs, prostitution, violence, etc. In Africa, millions of women become prostitutes; that doesn’t mean prostitution is a good thing. It means that their perceived options are limited.
    (BTW: I know that Michael is not making this point; he just quoted a reporter that made it.)
    I agree with Michael that for some folks in some circumstances, a Wal-Mart job can be a great job. For other folks, it’s all they can get.

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