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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy Walmart's Plan to Pit Low-Wage Workers Against Low-Wage Consumers Is Failing
http://www.alternet.org/labor/why-walmarts-plan-pit-low-wage-workers-against-low-wage-consumers-failingBlack Friday is the day when many Americans find refuge in the corporations that squeeze them out of the middle class. Black Friday deals, which offer you that one-day opportunity to get the most bang for your small buck, is good enough to wait in line for at dawn or even leave Thanksgiving dinner early this year as early as 6pm.
Thats why its tricky for corporations financially burdened workforce to ask consumers not to shop in the same stores that help keep many of them destitute, which is what Walmart workers at 1,500 stores will be doing this Black Friday. After all, when youre left fighting over crumbs, its difficult to realize that Walmart snuck off with the whole pie.
Walmart and its supporters boast that if the corporation were to pay its workers more, it would have to raise prices for consumers. A few months ago, when Walmart refused to open three stores in Washington, D.C. if proposed living-wage legislation passed, a general manager lamented that paying its workers a living wage would result in fewer jobs, higher prices and fewer total retail options.
But a new report by public policy organization Demos reveals that Walmart could raise its workers' wages without costing consumers a dime. The report, titled A Higher Wage is Possible: How Walmart Can Invest in Its Workforce Without Costing Customers a Dime, found that Walmart could raise wages by $5.83 per hour without raising prices. The report revealed that Walmart spends $7.6 billion annually buying back shares of its own stock. Amy Traub, co-author of the report, said share buybacks are Wall Street financial maneuvers that are unproductive, and often fail, in the long run, its goal of making its shares worth more. The report quotes a Wall Street Journal business analyst, who wrote:
The evidence overwhelmingly shows that heavy buyback companies usually create less value for shareholders over time Many managements have become so infatuated with how buybacks increase earnings per share that these distributions are crowding out sound business investments that create more value over time.
LuvNewcastle
(16,845 posts)Since money is all that matters to those greedy Waltons, the only way to get them to change is by hitting them in their pocketbook. I'd love to see them have terrible sales this Friday.
kelliekat44
(7,759 posts)food to give away.
LuvNewcastle
(16,845 posts)or anyone else and work on holidays to get their minds off of being alone, but most people need at least one day a year to be with loved ones. They could shut down everything but the hospital and emergency services, really. If people can't remember to get all the stuff they need on the days leading up to the holiday, they can do without it for one day. I guess if a person really wants to work on the holiday, they could be allowed to do it, but no one should be forced.
Ilsa
(61,695 posts)They are open on Thanksgiving. If they say "yes", I say "I'm so sorry", wish them a Happy Thx, but I wouldn't be seeing them on that day.
The holiday food is out for days in advance. Yes, there will always be exceptional circumstances, but I want it to be extremely unprofitable for them to be open on the Holiday.
Laelth
(32,017 posts)-Laelth
TBF
(32,058 posts)Tigress DEM
(7,887 posts)If they can't price it decent during the rest of the year, body slamming the price for one day doesn't interest me.
moose65
(3,166 posts)I mean, it used to be an "event." The stores were closed all day on Thanksgiving, and then they had the big re-opening on Friday. But the opening time continued to creep - first, stores opened at their regular times, then it was 6 am, then 5 am, then 2 am, then midnight. Last year Wal-Mart and many stores opened at 8 pm on Thanksgiving, and this year it's 6 pm. Pretty soon they will be opening at 12 noon, and it won't be long before they stay open all day long, without being closed at all. When that happens, when does the "sale" start? There will be no official start to the shopping season, and that's kinda hard to put on the advertising: "Come on in, we're always open and the sale prices go into effect at 8 am on Thanksgiving" just doesn't have a ring to it, ya know??
Tigress DEM
(7,887 posts)People getting trampled for a good deal? Gah, just doesn't fit with my holiday spirit.
Myrina
(12,296 posts).... is that no matter how much earlier the stores start their 'black friday' sales, people only have X dollars to spend.
In some cases that X = 0. So pushing people to buy buy buy when the jobs they work give them no no no money to spend on extra crap is totally illogical.
When are the low-wage, low-price retailers and fast food corps going to realize that they are eventually going to undercut THEMSELVES?