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In Praise of Walmart
Townhall.com ^ | January 25, 2013 | Mike Shedlock

Posted on 01/25/2013 9:37:55 AM PST by Kaslin

Once again I am here to sing the praises of Walmart. Over the years I have done so on many occasions.

Many misguided souls take the other side. They blame Walmart for ruining mom and pop grocery stores, mom and pop hardware stores, etc.

Not me, I praise cheaper prices. Moreover, it's what consumers voted for with there hard-earned dollars.

If anyone wants to pay more for stuff, all they have to do is shop at a mom and pop hardware store, grocery store, or pharmacy. Most don't because they want a bargain.

Today, I have good news. Walmart-style competition may be on the way in the healthcare business.

The Orlando Business Journal writes Wal-Mart exploring private health insurance exchange for small biz.

Wal-Mart is exploring the idea of building a private health insurance exchange tailored to offer cheaper health insurance to small businesses, a vice president told Orlando Business Journal Jan. 11.

Marcus Osborne, vice president of health and wellness payer relations for Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT), spoke to OBJ after his keynote speech at the Foundation of Associated Industries of Florida’s 2013 Health Care Affordability Summit. Osborne said Wal-Mart wants to work with insurers and managed care companies to find new, low-cost health insurance options tailored for small companies, which historically have limited options.

The idea is to offer those products through a health insurance exchange — or as Osborne said, simply a marketplace — that would leverage Wal-Mart’s buying and marketing power to make the exchanges widely available and used. “It would allow small employers to piggyback Wal-Mart,” Osborne said. “We haven’t got it all figured out, but it’s one of the things we’re looking at.”

“The biggest problem today small employers face from a health insurance perspective is they have no alternatives,” Osborne said. “If they find anything, they’ve got to take it. There’s something wrong with that.”

In Praise of Walmart

Obamacare is going to raise the cost of healthcare. Walmart will lower costs. I have been waiting for this since Summer of 2008.

Flashback June 22, 2008: Trade Wars, Health Care, and Wal-Mart

This post is about trade wars, tariffs, health care, and Wal-Mart. I will tie these themes together starting with a look at Wal-Mart and health care.

I have many disagreements with Jim Jubak, but he hits the nail on the head with
Let Wal-Mart fix US health care.

I know who can fix our broken health care system -- and who can't:

I say, let Wal-Mart Stores (WMT) do it. Hold your guffaws. Stifle your impulse to scoff. Control those sputters of rage.

Wal-Mart has done more to expand coverage and lower costs in the past year than any government program to come out of Washington in the past 10 years. And I'd bet the new programs that this company -- known for stiffing its own part-time workers on health care benefits -- has announced in the past year will do more to expand coverage and cut costs than anything likely to come out of a McCain, Clinton or Obama first term.

Letting Wal-Mart run the health care system would fix many of those problems. It's a company that understands how low prices can build market share and thus increase profits. Furthermore, it's a company with a culture of cutting costs that has shown no compunction in pushing suppliers to the wall over price. The Wal-Mart motto ought to be, "Make it cheaper, or we'll find someone who can." I'd love to see that attitude brought to bear in health care.

Inquiring minds will want to read the rest of the article. It's surprisingly good.

Jubak makes a compelling case. He never said this explicitly but I will. "We do not need higher wages or higher prices. We need lower prices and a dollar that buys more".

Hopefully a good idea, long overdue, is about to happen. I repeat what I said in 2008: "We do not need higher wages or higher prices. We need lower prices and a dollar that buys more".

Walmart-style competition would do just that.

My primary fear is regulators will kill the idea based on trumped up charges of some sort (or bribes from healthcare providers who fear competition) before the idea takes hold.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: 0carenightmare; obamacare; retail; walmart; walmarx; zerocare
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1 posted on 01/25/2013 9:37:57 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

WalMart might be a good move. They are an extremely tough company to deal with from the supplier (healthcare operations) side.


2 posted on 01/25/2013 9:41:28 AM PST by buffaloguy
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To: buffaloguy

nah, they’ll buckle to government and end up supporting Obama Care - because they have so many Obama phone customers, if you get my drift...


3 posted on 01/25/2013 9:42:39 AM PST by C. Edmund Wright
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To: C. Edmund Wright

They gave Obama $1 million last election.

Wal-Mart is dead to me.


4 posted on 01/25/2013 9:46:27 AM PST by Arm_Bears (Ted Kennedy's Oldsmobile has killed more people than my guns.)
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To: buffaloguy

They managed to sell some prescription drugs cheap. I’m sure HHS would have to put a stop to this just to avoid the embarrassment of private enterprise doing what they cannot do efficiently.


5 posted on 01/25/2013 9:46:52 AM PST by Rusty0604
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To: Arm_Bears

That’s the challenge of being a FReeper.
If you boycott all the stores that have been ruled out on FR, there’s no place left.


6 posted on 01/25/2013 9:50:30 AM PST by nascarnation (Baraq's economic policy: trickle up poverty)
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To: C. Edmund Wright

I don’t get your drift, Walmart is known as the store for the people the elites and GOPe despise, working people, suburban people, gun owners, rural people, conservatives, Christians. Blue enclaves and many big cities and urban centers don’t even allow Walmart to sell groceries.

When I looked it up a few years ago Walmart was not even allowed to build grocery stores in place like Los Angeles, New York, and San Diego.

Living in a city is what made me such a late comer to discovering that Walmart was going to become my favorite grocery store, they have been largely forbidden to urban people, who are forced to shop in union stores.


7 posted on 01/25/2013 9:58:53 AM PST by ansel12 (Cruz said "conservatives trust Sarah Palin that if she says this guy is a conservative, that he is")
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To: buffaloguy

A former classmate of mine from Stanford actually met with a Walmart “liaison” in Arkanasas (everyone does if they want to deal with Walmart) as he wanted to sell well-designed cooking utensils, as he had connections in China. The liaisons from Walmart are pretty much trained to knock the wholesale price down to almost non-profitable rates but you really, really have got to have impeccable business haggling skills for if you don’t, these guys will walk all over you.


8 posted on 01/25/2013 10:07:18 AM PST by max americana (Make the world a better place by punching a liberal in the face)
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To: Kaslin

Anyone who loves WalMart must be blind to how they are destroying America.

Remember, Hillary Clinton was on the Board of Directors of WalMart and WalMart flew Bill Clinton around to the primaries in their corporate jets.

Walmart is the reason that Charlie Trie and all the other illegal campaign contributions came into Clinton’s campaign and were never prosecuted.

Walmart is not out for you, they are out for themselves by playing an unlevel playing field. They have cost this country far more jobs than they created.

You need to read the book, how Walmart is destroying America.

A friend of mine quit as a regional Walmart manager. She said that Walmart would actually take pictures of their competitors in an area and put the pic on their office bulletin board. They would then price their products to drive that store out of business, raising their own prices when it closed. She said they would put a huge red “X” over the picture on their office bulletin board as they drove them out.

After closing the competing stores in a community, they would close their own store to open a regional Super Walmart, forcing the elderly to find transportation to the regional store. When Walmart enters a community, there is a net loss of jobs.

I’m for free tade on a level playing field. Not by using slave labor to support a Communist China regime!


9 posted on 01/25/2013 10:09:57 AM PST by tired&retired
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To: Kaslin

“.....cheaper prices..” There is a difference between “cheap” and “value”. The author is correct in that if you want something cheap you go to Walmart. If you want value for your purchase you go someplace else.

I can buy four pairs of work boots at Walmart for what I pay at Redwing. Redwings are made in the USA, by US workers, and are made of premium leather. Mine are four years old and still look new. The cheap boots are made in foreign shops, by foreign workers, paid slave wages, at companies that get to ignore safety and environmental regulation and they may not last six months in line of work. They are then thrown away, like most junk, continuing the cycle of waste.

If Walmart is able to bring competition to the medical market place, well good for them and us. If they want to bring “cheap” then we need to be careful what we wish for.


10 posted on 01/25/2013 10:15:09 AM PST by PJammers (I can't help it... It's my idiom!)
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To: nascarnation

nd if you did half the things that freepers say you should, you’d probably be dead, or at least very miserable...


11 posted on 01/25/2013 10:16:07 AM PST by stuartcr ("I upraded my moral compass to a GPS, to keep up with the times.")
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To: ansel12
I agree. JimRob has never complained about my tagline, and I've had the same one for quite a few years.
12 posted on 01/25/2013 10:27:09 AM PST by Beagle8U (Free Republic -- One stop shopping ....... It's the Conservative Super WalMart for news .)
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To: stuartcr

That’s one of the reasons I don’t refer ANYBODY to FR anymore, there are way to many crackpot ideas that don’t get contested.


13 posted on 01/25/2013 10:27:13 AM PST by nascarnation (Baraq's economic policy: trickle up poverty)
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To: tired&retired
"After closing the competing stores in a community, they would close their own store to open a regional Super Walmart, forcing the elderly to find transportation to the regional store. When Walmart enters a community, there is a net loss of jobs."

Well I can tell ya as far as jobs and businesses go in our area your entire premise about Wal-Mart is Bullshit.

When Wal-mart opened in our county there was a few grocery stores and no stores that sold things like Computers and craft goods etc.

Wal-mart has been here over 20 years and now we have more grocery stores and more other stores like crafts and computers etc in the area and many more jobs. One store went out of business and that was Big Bear and they closed all over the state (My SIL worked for them) because they were badly run. Krogers built a bigger store just blocks from Wal-mart and is going strong.

My town is 8 miles away from the town the has the Wal-Mart. Its been slowly dying for 30 years. When Wal-mart proposed a new store in our town the anti-Wal-Mart idiots stormed in filling our council meetings with Big Union supporters claiming 400 jobs would be lost in our town. Wal-mart guaranteed 200 Jobs on the day they opened and another 100-200 after operation of 2 years. Sadly the anti-Wal-mart idiots won.

3 years later 8 businesses have closed and our town can't even afford Salt for the roads and need to alternate sending power to the street lights because they can't afford the electric bill. Our city attorney tells me that the taxes from the jobs and the sales tax from Wal-mart would have paid for all of the stuff we can't afford now and much more using half of the figures Wal-Mart promised based on their expected income from the store.

14 posted on 01/25/2013 10:29:35 AM PST by Mad Dawgg (If you're going to deny my 1st Amendment rights then I must proceed to the 2nd one...)
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To: Arm_Bears

Walmart has to play ball with Obama and they know it. At any time he could send investigators into stores and find dozens of missed timecard punches from minimum-wage nitwits. Each of these can be interpreted as “wage theft” subject to a large fine. Not to mention what the EPA could do to them.

My prediction....Walmart voluntarily accepts unionization before the end of this decade.


15 posted on 01/25/2013 10:30:17 AM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: Kaslin

WalMart good, WalMart bad? I shop at the store that best serves my needs, at the moment it’s a local WalMart. If someone does a better overall job I’ll shop there.


16 posted on 01/25/2013 10:30:26 AM PST by count-your-change (you don't have to be brilliant, not being stupid is enough)
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To: Kaslin

Walmart is making (heard) 29 million dollars an hour. How? Getting you to buy less in quantity and quality for the same price you paid yesterday, by lowering quality because they force manufacturers to lower their prices. Even my toothpaste has air bubbles in it. I never had air bubbles in my toothpaste while growing up or we would have been making fart jokes about it. Ever notice how a new product is good but by the next season it is garbage? obviously I have shopped there.


17 posted on 01/25/2013 10:34:51 AM PST by huldah1776
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To: ansel12

First, Walmart is a study in contradictions.
Second, I would submit that you formed an opinon of Walmart about five years ago and quit observing. They gave a ton of money to Obama, and are signing up with Obama on guns to help manage gun sales (and also to screw the indepdent gun shops) and I guarantee their medical program will accomodate Obama Care, not fight against it. Wake up, this ain’t the Walmart of even 3 years ago. They’re “down for the struggle” now.


18 posted on 01/25/2013 10:36:26 AM PST by C. Edmund Wright
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To: huldah1776

Biased drivel


19 posted on 01/25/2013 10:37:22 AM PST by bert ((K.E. N.P. N.C. +12 .....The fairest Deduction to be reduced is the Standard Deduction)
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To: Buckeye McFrog
“My prediction....Walmart voluntarily accepts unionization before the end of this decade.”

Sure thing, the massive Christmas worker strike worked out so well for the union stooges that tried to organize it. sarc.

20 posted on 01/25/2013 10:37:22 AM PST by Beagle8U (Free Republic -- One stop shopping ....... It's the Conservative Super WalMart for news .)
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