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Wally World (Wal-Mart) driving us all to the unemployment line

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maggrwaggr Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-20-03 04:45 PM
Original message
Wally World (Wal-Mart) driving us all to the unemployment line
fascinating article.

http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/77/walmart.html

(snip)
the real story of Wal-Mart, the story that never gets told, is the story of the pressure the biggest retailer relentlessly applies to its suppliers in the name of bringing us "every day low prices." It's the story of what that pressure does to the companies Wal-Mart does business with, to U.S. manufacturing, and to the economy as a whole. That story can be found floating in a gallon jar of pickles at Wal-Mart.

Wal-Mart is not just the world's largest retailer. It's the world's largest company--bigger than ExxonMobil, General Motors, and General Electric. The scale can be hard to absorb. Wal-Mart sold $244.5 billion worth of goods last year. It sells in three months what

number-two retailer Home Depot sells in a year. And in its own category of general merchandise and groceries, Wal-Mart no longer has any real rivals. It does more business than Target, Sears, Kmart, J.C. Penney, Safeway, and Kroger combined. "Clearly," says Edward Fox, head of Southern Methodist University's J.C. Penney Center for Retailing Excellence, "Wal-Mart is more powerful than any retailer has ever been." It is, in fact, so big and so furtively powerful as to have become an entirely different order of corporate being.

Wal-Mart wields its power for just one purpose: to bring the lowest possible prices to its customers. At Wal-Mart, that goal is never reached. The retailer has a clear policy for suppliers: On basic products that don't change, the price Wal-Mart will pay, and will charge shoppers, must drop year after year. But what almost no one outside the world of Wal-Mart and its 21,000 suppliers knows is the high cost of those low prices. Wal-Mart has the power to squeeze profit-killing concessions from vendors. To survive in the face of its pricing demands, makers of everything from bras to bicycles to blue jeans have had to lay off employees and close U.S. plants in favor of outsourcing products from overseas.
(snip)
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democratreformed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-20-03 04:57 PM
Response to Original message
1. Another Wal Mart article
Edited on Thu Nov-20-03 04:58 PM by democratreformed
http://www.arktimes.com/031010coverstorya.html

if you're interested...
This one's about the lengths they go to to keep out unions.
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ulysses Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-20-03 05:06 PM
Response to Original message
2. Yay big corporations! Yay greed!
Anyone want to hazard a guess concerning what kind of jobs we'll all have (or not have) in ten years?
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elfwitch Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-20-03 05:22 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. corporate feudalism
That is what it all boild down to.
You are weither a lord (CEO) or a serf (the rest of us).
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