|
Why Wal-Mart Does Not Strengthen
Our Economy* David Nassar
Wed Apr 30, 10:20 PM ET http://news.yahoo.com/s/huffpost/20080501/cm_huffpost/099463&printer=1;_ylt=AjJxm3RcuSXvICWELatRB.8e6sgF
It's tax rebate time, and no one is hungrier for the
tax rebate checks arriving in mailboxes today than
Wal-Mart. The retailer is advertising tax-rebate
sales and has offered to cash the checks for free --
all in hopes that consumers will spend their
newfound money at Wal-Mart stores. But spending your
tax rebate at Wal-Mart won't stimulate the economy
-- and here's why:
Despite bringing in over $378 billion last year,
Wal-Mart repeatedly underpays its American
workforce. More than 80 wage & hour lawsuits,
including a recently certified class action lawsuit
in California, are currently pending against the
company. Plus, it faces more than 200 discrimination
lawsuits for unfair promotion practices, pay
discrepancies and other issues, including the
nation's largest workplace gender discrimination
lawsuit. By failing to fairly compensate its
employees, Wal-Mart cheats states out of income tax
revenues. Wal-Mart also pays poorly. While the
company seeks to benefit from the government's
rebate payout, Wal-Mart's low wages means store
employees have little or no disposable income to
spend to stimulate the economy. Think about what
even a small raise for Wal-Mart's 1 million+ workers
would mean nationally, or what it would mean to your
city or town if everyone at your local Wal-Mart got
a raise.
Wal-Mart sources the vast majority of its products
from countries overseas, meaning most of the cost of
a given Wal-Mart product doesn't go into the U.S.
economy. Rather than boosting the U.S. economy,
Wal-Mart has played a major role in exporting U.S.
manufacturing jobs to countries with low labor and
environmental standards. Meanwhile, the company has
embraced unions in its Chinese stores and has
negotiated with them to raise Chinese salaries.
Apparently, what is good enough for China is not
good enough here at home.
Wal-Mart underfunds its health care plan and cuts
corners whenever possible, forcing many of its
employees to postpone care, thus decreasing their
productivity and increasing the eventual cost of
their treatment. In desperation, many of them rely
on state-sponsored care and drain yet more funds
from American communities. That means when Wal-Mart
employees end up in emergency rooms, it's U.S.
taxpayers who end up footing the bill. If Wal-Mart
were truly interested in stimulating the economy, it
would begin to adequately fund its health care plan
and take care of its own Associates.
Wal-Mart routinely dodges state and local taxes,
meaning money spent at a Wal-Mart store won't end up
in your community. Wal-Mart actively works to
challenge property tax assessments and creates
complex real estate arrangements to obscure how much
taxes the company owes. When Wal-Mart dodges its tax
burden, it takes precious revenues away from cities
and states to pay for roads, schools and other
services. In turn, individual taxpayers are forced
to pay more to make up the difference (which takes
more money out of their pockets) or get by with
less.
With its low price focus, Wal-Mart may appear to
help the U.S. economy.
But, the reality is that with its poor wages and
benefits, massive China sourcing and tax avoidance,
Wal-Mart makes its workers and the communities where
it operates poorer.
As our nation's largest employer and most
financially-successful company, Wal-Mart is a
singular American institution. It occupies a unique
position in our world by virtue of its size, reach
and responsibility for the livelihoods of millions
of workers and the needs of billions of consumers.
And with such overwhelming influence comes certain
moral responsibilities. It is the acceptance or
rejection of those responsibilities that determines
greatness.
For the time being, Wal-Mart has rejected those
responsibilities and because of that choice, the
money spent there does nothing of what it could to
strengthen our economy. Higher salaries, quality
affordable healthcare and paying what they owe like
any good American, are just three things Wal-Mart
can do tomorrow that will make them a company worthy
of our money.
Copyright © 2008 HuffingtonPost.com. All rights
reserved. The information contained in Huffington
Post commentary may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten or redistributed without prior written
authority of huffingtonpost.com.
Copyright © 2008 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
|