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Business/Finance See other Business/Finance Articles Title: WalMart Doubles Down On Wage Hike Debacle, Will Give Everyone A Raise Next Month WalMarts attempt to pacify the living wage crowd by giving the companys lowest paid employees a tiny, across-the-board raise has been nothing short of a disaster. The fiasco started early last year when the worlds largest retailer decided to spend some $1 billion to appease those who claim the companys hourly workers dont make enough to live with some semblance of dignity. To be sure, the veracity of that claim was never in question. Lowly shelf stockers, cashiers, and door greeters most assuredly do not make enough money to get by especially considering the soaring cost of housing in America. The question was whether WalMart was making a prudent decision by hiking wages. More specifically, it wasnt clear whether the benefits the companys hourly workers would receive from seeing a few extra pennies on their paychecks each month would offset the wave of knock-on effects the wage hike would invariably trigger. Sure enough, WalMart almost immediately moved to squeeze more savings out of the supply chain by attempting to dictate how vendors spend their excess cash, charging storage fees, and demanding that any savings from the yuan deval be passed on directly to Bentonville. When that proved insufficient to preserve margins, WalMart resorted to Economics 101: they fired some folks. First at the home office in Arkansas and then at 269 stores where more than 15,000 employees learned this month that they no longer have a job. Oh, and the retailer unleashed one hell of a guidance cut in October, triggering the biggest decline in the companys shares in 17 years. Through it all, we suggested that things would likely get worse for the company because after all, you cant very well hike wages for one group of employees and not everyone else lest you should inadvertently start a revolt among higher paid workers. That is, you have to preserve the wage hierarchy. For someone who has worked at the company for years, painstakingly climbing the corporate ladder and gradually moving up in pay grade, the across-the-board raise for subordinates will seem arbitrary. Why, the loyal employee might well ask, does the shelf stocker who started two months ago deserve a raise but I do not? Heres what we said back in August: Some senior Wal-Mart employees have suddenly realized that although they may still be making more than their subordinates, the wage hierarchy has been distorted and that distortion had nothing to do with merit. Higher paid employees dont understand why everyone under them in the corporate structure suddenly makes more money and if people who are higher up on the corporate ladder dont receive raises that keep the hierarchy proportional they may simply quit which means that, for Wal-Mart, raising the minimum for the lowest paid workers to just $9/hour will end up costing the company around $1.5 billion if you include the additional raises the company will have to give to higher paid employees in order to retain their talents and avoid a mid-level management mutiny. Well sure enough, WalMart announced on Wednesday evening that all hourly workers will receive a 2% pay bump next month. The cost: around $2.7 billion. When the retailer raised its minimum wage last April to $9 an hour, some long- term workers objected to being paid nearly the same as a new hires with less experience, WSJ writes, This time Wal-Mart wanted all employees to benefit at once and to clearly communicate the change. Employees want to know they will still be ahead of those who come from an entry- level position, Judith McKenna, Wal-Marts U.S. chief operating officer said. At least they are recognizing that the longtime workers who are already making more than $10 need something, union-backed OUR Walmarts Tyfani Faulkner added, before noting that she doesnt think 2% is enough for employees that often make so little to begin with. Precisely. These dribs and drabs may have some symbolic value and may bolster WalMarts image as a good corporate citizen, but lets not kid ourselves: a 2% raise isnt going to be a life-changing event for the vast majority of the companys employees who are still going to struggle. Does that mean WalMart shouldnt raise wages? No. But what it does mean is that the company should conduct a careful cost-benefit analysis before spending billions on wage hikes that not only make the retailer less competitive in a market that runs on the thinnest of margins, but in fact imperil the companys odds of surviving in a world dominated increasingly by E- commerce. Dont believe us? Just ask the 16,000 WalMart workers who were laid off last week. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
WAL-Mart made up for this "wage increase" by getting rid of employees from EVERY store, not just the ones they're closing. Plus they've cut out tons of inventory. The New, Younger Management is obviously all from Haavard and Yale ! They'll be the next Sears, K-Mart, and Target soon. "If we dont adhere to the Constitution on matters as significant as presidential eligibility, then the Constitution ceases to be a meaningful document for guiding our nation."
Used to be that even with low wages every time they advertised for help they got about 500 applications for every opening.
Probably still do, conditions being the way they are now. The Superstore here has cut the available help down to a bare minimum, and gotten fairly oppressive in management style. Fast moving items just don't get restocked on a timely basis, which is crazy. There are obviously inventory managers (in Bentonville) that are just coasting along on old data. I wonder how many folks know that the indiv. stores can't even set their own thermostats for temp. "If we dont adhere to the Constitution on matters as significant as presidential eligibility, then the Constitution ceases to be a meaningful document for guiding our nation."
Talk about cutting things to the bone! What's next -- full automation, running lights at half the power? Who would have thought just 10 years ago that corporate giants like Lehman and Circuit City would be dead, and others teetering on the brink?
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