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The Wal-Mart You Don't Know
Fast Company ^ | December 2003, | Charles Fishman

Posted on 01/17/2005 10:28:09 AM PST by jb6

The giant retailer's low prices often come with a high cost. Wal-Mart's relentless pressure can crush the companies it does business with and force them to send jobs overseas. Are we shopping our way straight to the unemployment line?

A gallon-sized jar of whole pickles is something to behold. The jar is the size of a small aquarium. The fat green pickles, floating in swampy juice, look reptilian, their shapes exaggerated by the glass. It weighs 12 pounds, too big to carry with one hand. The gallon jar of pickles is a display of abundance and excess; it is entrancing, and also vaguely unsettling. This is the product that Wal-Mart fell in love with: Vlasic's gallon jar of pickles.

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Featured Services Find Online Degrees Business Directory Research Companies Find Biz Software Wal-Mart priced it at $2.97--a year's supply of pickles for less than $3! "They were using it as a 'statement' item," says Pat Hunn, who calls himself the "mad scientist" of Vlasic's gallon jar. "Wal-Mart was putting it before consumers, saying, This represents what Wal-Mart's about. You can buy a stinkin' gallon of pickles for $2.97. And it's the nation's number-one brand."

Therein lies the basic conundrum of doing business with the world's largest retailer. By selling a gallon of kosher dills for less than most grocers sell a quart, Wal-Mart may have provided a ser-vice for its customers. But what did it do for Vlasic? The pickle maker had spent decades convincing customers that they should pay a premium for its brand. Now Wal-Mart was practically giving them away. And the fevered buying spree that resulted distorted every aspect of Vlasic's operations, from farm field to factory to financial statement.

Indeed, as Vlasic discovered, 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.

Of course, U.S. companies have been moving jobs offshore for decades, long before Wal-Mart was a retailing power. But there is no question that the chain is helping accelerate the loss of American jobs to low-wage countries such as China. Wal-Mart, which in the late 1980s and early 1990s trumpeted its claim to "Buy American," has doubled its imports from China in the past five years alone, buying some $12 billion in merchandise in 2002. That's nearly 10% of all Chinese exports to the United States.

One way to think of Wal-Mart is as a vast pipeline that gives non-U.S. companies direct access to the American market. "One of the things that limits or slows the growth of imports is the cost of establishing connections and networks," says Paul Krugman, the Princeton University economist. "Wal-Mart is so big and so centralized that it can all at once hook Chinese and other suppliers into its digital system. So--wham!--you have a large switch to overseas sourcing in a period quicker than under the old rules of retailing."

Steve Dobbins has been bearing the brunt of that switch. He's president and CEO of Carolina Mills, a 75-year-old North Carolina company that supplies thread, yarn, and textile finishing to apparel makers--half of which supply Wal-Mart. Carolina Mills grew steadily until 2000. But in the past three years, as its customers have gone either overseas or out of business, it has shrunk from 17 factories to 7, and from 2,600 employees to 1,200. Dobbins's customers have begun to face imported clothing sold so cheaply to Wal-Mart that they could not compete even if they paid their workers nothing.

"People ask, 'How can it be bad for things to come into the U.S. cheaply? How can it be bad to have a bargain at Wal-Mart?' Sure, it's held inflation down, and it's great to have bargains," says Dobbins. "But you can't buy anything if you're not employed. We are shopping ourselves out of jobs."

The gallon jar of pickles at Wal-Mart became a devastating success, giving Vlasic strong sales and growth numbers--but slashing its profits by millions of dollars. There is no question that Wal-Mart's relentless drive to squeeze out costs has benefited consumers. The giant retailer is at least partly responsible for the low rate of U.S. inflation, and a McKinsey & Co. study concluded that about 12% of the economy's productivity gains in the second half of the 1990s could be traced to Wal-Mart alone.

There is also no question that doing business with Wal-Mart can give a supplier a fast, heady jolt of sales and market share. But that fix can come with long-term consequences for the health of a brand and a business. Vlasic, for example, wasn't looking to build its brand on a gallon of whole pickles. Pickle companies make money on "the cut," slicing cucumbers into spears and hamburger chips. "Cucumbers in the jar, you don't make a whole lot of money there," says Steve Young, a former vice president of grocery marketing for pickles at Vlasic, who has since left the company.

At some point in the late 1990s, a Wal-Mart buyer saw Vlasic's gallon jar and started talking to Pat Hunn about it. Hunn, who has also since left Vlasic, was then head of Vlasic's Wal-Mart sales team, based in Dallas. The gallon intrigued the buyer. In sales tests, priced somewhere over $3, "the gallon sold like crazy," says Hunn, "surprising us all." The Wal-Mart buyer had a brainstorm: What would happen to the gallon if they offered it nationwide and got it below $3? Hunn was skeptical, but his job was to look for ways to sell pickles at Wal-Mart. Why not?

And so Vlasic's gallon jar of pickles went into every Wal-Mart, some 3,000 stores, at $2.97, a price so low that Vlasic and Wal-Mart were making only a penny or two on a jar, if that. It was showcased on big pallets near the front of stores. It was an abundance of abundance. "It was selling 80 jars a week, on average, in every store," says Young. Doesn't sound like much, until you do the math: That's 240,000 gallons of pickles, just in gallon jars, just at Wal-Mart, every week. Whole fields of cucumbers were heading out the door.

For Vlasic, the gallon jar of pickles became what might be called a devastating success. "Quickly, it started cannibalizing our non-Wal-Mart business," says Young. "We saw consumers who used to buy the spears and the chips in supermarkets buying the Wal-Mart gallons. They'd eat a quarter of a jar and throw the thing away when they got moldy. A family can't eat them fast enough."

The gallon jar reshaped Vlasic's pickle business: It chewed up the profit margin of the business with Wal-Mart, and of pickles generally. Procurement had to scramble to find enough pickles to fill the gallons, but the volume gave Vlasic strong sales numbers, strong growth numbers, and a powerful place in the world of pickles at Wal-Mart. Which accounted for 30% of Vlasic's business. But the company's profits from pickles had shriveled 25% or more, Young says--millions of dollars.

The gallon was hoisting Vlasic and hurting it at the same time.

Young remembers begging Wal-Mart for relief. "They said, 'No way,' " says Young. "We said we'll increase the price"--even $3.49 would have helped tremendously--"and they said, 'If you do that, all the other products of yours we buy, we'll stop buying.' It was a clear threat." Hunn recalls things a little differently, if just as ominously: "They said, 'We want the $2.97 gallon of pickles. If you don't do it, we'll see if someone else might.' I knew our competitors were saying to Wal-Mart, 'We'll do the $2.97 gallons if you give us your other business.' " Wal-Mart's business was so indispensable to Vlasic, and the gallon so central to the Wal-Mart relationship, that decisions about the future of the gallon were made at the CEO level.

Finally, Wal-Mart let Vlasic up for air. "The Wal-Mart guy's response was classic," Young recalls. "He said, 'Well, we've done to pickles what we did to orange juice. We've killed it. We can back off.' " Vlasic got to take it down to just over half a gallon of pickles, for $2.79. Not long after that, in January 2001, Vlasic filed for bankruptcy--although the gallon jar of pickles, everyone agrees, wasn't a critical factor.

By now, it is accepted wisdom that Wal-Mart makes the companies it does business with more efficient and focused, leaner and faster. Wal-Mart itself is known for continuous improvement in its ability to handle, move, and track merchandise. It expects the same of its suppliers. But the ability to operate at peak efficiency only gets you in the door at Wal-Mart. Then the real demands start. The public image Wal-Mart projects may be as cheery as its yellow smiley-face mascot, but there is nothing genial about the process by which Wal-Mart gets its suppliers to provide tires and contact lenses, guns and underarm deodorant at every day low prices. Wal-Mart is legendary for forcing its suppliers to redesign everything from their packaging to their computer systems. It is also legendary for quite straightforwardly telling them what it will pay for their goods.

"We are one of Wal-Mart's biggest suppliers, and they are our biggest customer, by far. We have a great relationship. That's all I can say. Are we done now?" John Fitzgerald, a former vice president of Nabisco, remembers Wal-Mart's reaction to his company's plan to offer a 25-cent newspaper coupon for a large bag of Lifesavers in advance of Halloween. Wal-Mart told Nabisco to add up what it would spend on the promotion--for the newspaper ads, the coupons, and handling--and then just take that amount off the price instead. "That isn't necessarily good for the manufacturer," Fitzgerald says. "They need things that draw attention."

It also is not unheard of for Wal-Mart to demand to examine the private financial records of a supplier, and to insist that its margins are too high and must be cut. And the smaller the supplier, one academic study shows, the greater the likelihood that it will be forced into damaging concessions. Melissa Berryhill, a Wal-Mart spokeswoman, disagrees: "The fact is Wal-Mart, perhaps like no other retailer, seeks to establish collaborative and mutually beneficial relationships with our suppliers."

For many suppliers, though, the only thing worse than doing business with Wal-Mart may be not doing business with Wal-Mart. Last year, 7.5 cents of every dollar spent in any store in the United States (other than auto-parts stores) went to the retailer. That means a contract with Wal-Mart can be critical even for the largest consumer-goods companies. Dial Corp., for example, does 28% of its business with Wal-Mart. If Dial lost that one account, it would have to double its sales to its next nine customers just to stay even. "Wal-Mart is the essential retailer, in a way no other retailer is," says Gib Carey, a partner at Bain & Co., who is leading a yearlong study of how to do business with Wal-Mart. "Our clients cannot grow without finding a way to be successful with Wal-Mart."

Many companies and their executives frankly admit that supplying Wal-Mart is like getting into the company version of basic training with an implacable Army drill sergeant. The process may be unpleasant. But there can be some positive results.

"Everyone from the forklift driver on up to me, the CEO, knew we had to deliver [to Wal-Mart] on time. Not 10 minutes late. And not 45 minutes early, either," says Robin Prever, who was CEO of Saratoga Beverage Group from 1992 to 2000, and made private-label water sold at Wal-Mart. "The message came through clearly: You have this 30-second delivery window. Either you're there, or you're out. With a customer like that, it changes your organization. For the better. It wakes everybody up. And all our customers benefited. We changed our whole approach to doing business."

But you won't hear evenhanded stories like that from Wal-Mart, or from its current suppliers. Despite being a publicly traded company, Wal-Mart is intensely private. It declined to talk in detail about its relationships with its suppliers for this story. More strikingly, dozens of companies contacted declined to talk about even the basics of their business with Wal-Mart.

Here, for example, is an executive at Dial: "We are one of Wal-Mart's biggest suppliers, and they are our biggest customer by far. We have a great relationship. That's all I can say. Are we done now?" Goaded a bit, the executive responds with an almost hysterical edge: "Are you meshuga? Why in the world would we talk about Wal-Mart? Ask me about anything else, we'll talk. But not Wal-Mart."

No one wants to end up in what is known among Wal-Mart vendors as the "penalty box"--punished, or even excluded from the store shelves, for saying something that makes Wal-Mart unhappy. (The penalty box is normally reserved for vendors who don't meet performance benchmarks, not for those who talk to the press.)

"You won't hear anything negative from most people," says Paul Kelly, founder of Silvermine Consulting Group, a company that helps businesses work more effectively with retailers. "It would be committing suicide. If Wal-Mart takes something the wrong way, it's like Saddam Hussein. You just don't want to piss them off."

As a result, this story was reported in an unusual way: by speaking with dozens of people who have spent years selling to Wal-Mart, or consulting to companies that sell to Wal-Mart, but who no longer work for companies that do business with Wal-Mart. Unless otherwise noted, the companies involved in the events they described refused even to confirm or deny the basics of the events.

To a person, all those interviewed credit Wal-Mart with a fundamental integrity in its dealings that's unusual in the world of consumer goods, retailing, and groceries. Wal-Mart does not cheat suppliers, it keeps its word, it pays its bills briskly. "They are tough people but very honest; they treat you honestly," says Peter Campanella, who ran the business that sold Corning kitchenware products, both at Corning and then at World Kitchen. "It was a joke to do business with most of their competitors. A fiasco."

But Wal-Mart also clearly does not hesitate to use its power, magnifying the Darwinian forces already at work in modern global capitalism.

Caught in the Wal-Mart squeeze, Huffy didn't just relinquish profits to keep its commitment to the retailer. It handed those profits to the competition. What does the squeeze look like at Wal-Mart? It is usually thoroughly rational, sometimes devastatingly so.

John Mariotti is a veteran of the consumer-products world--he spent nine years as president of Huffy Bicycle Co., a division of Huffy Corp., and is now chairman of World Kitchen, the company that sells Oxo, Revere, Corning, and Ekco brand housewares.

He could not be clearer on his opinion about Wal-Mart: It's a great company, and a great company to do business with. "Wal-Mart has done more good for America by several thousand orders of magnitude than they've done bad," Mariotti says. "They have raised the bar, and raised the bar for everybody."

Mariotti describes one episode from Huffy's relationship with Wal-Mart. It's a tale he tells to illustrate an admiring point he makes about the retailer. "They demand you do what you say you are going to do." But it's also a classic example of the damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't Wal-Mart squeeze. When Mariotti was at Huffy throughout the 1980s, the company sold a range of bikes to Wal-Mart, 20 or so models, in a spread of prices and profitability. It was a leading manufacturer of bikes in the United States, in places like Ponca City, Oklahoma; Celina, Ohio; and Farmington, Missouri.

One year, Huffy had committed to supply Wal-Mart with an entry-level, thin-margin bike--as many as Wal-Mart needed. Sales of the low-end bike took off. "I woke up May 1"--the heart of the bike production cycle for the summer--"and I needed 900,000 bikes," he says. "My factories could only run 450,000." As it happened, that same year, Huffy's fancier, more-profitable bikes were doing well, too, at Wal-Mart and other places. Huffy found itself in a bind.

With other retailers, perhaps, Mariotti might have sat down, renegotiated, tried to talk his way out of the corner. Not with Wal-Mart. "I made the deal up front with them," he says. "I knew how high was up. I was duty-bound to supply my customer." So he did something extraordinary. To free up production in order to make Wal-Mart's cheap bikes, he gave the designs for four of his higher-end, higher-margin products to rival manufacturers. "I conceded business to my competitors, because I just ran out of capacity," he says. Huffy didn't just relinquish profits to keep Wal-Mart happy--it handed those profits to its competition. "Wal-Mart didn't tell me what to do," Mariotti says. "They didn't have to." The retailer, he adds, "is tough as nails. But they give you a chance to compete. If you can't compete, that's your problem."

In the years since Mariotti left Huffy, the bike maker's relationship with Wal-Mart has been vital (though Huffy Corp. has lost money in three out of the last five years). It is the number-three seller of bikes in the United States. And Wal-Mart is the number-one retailer of bikes. But here's one last statistic about bicycles: Roughly 98% are now imported from places such as China, Mexico, and Taiwan. Huffy made its last bike in the United States in 1999.

As Mariotti says, Wal-Mart is tough as nails. But not every supplier agrees that the toughness is always accompanied by fairness. The Lovable Company was founded in 1926 by the grandfather of Frank Garson II, who was Lovable's last president. It did business with Wal-Mart, Garson says, from the earliest days of founder Sam Walton's first store in Bentonville, Arkansas. Lovable made bras and lingerie, supplying retailers that also included Sears and Victoria's Secret. At one point, it was the sixth-largest maker of intimate apparel in the United States, with 700 employees in this country and another 2,000 at eight factories in Central America.

Eventually Wal-Mart became Lovable's biggest customer. "Wal-Mart has a big pencil," says Garson. "They have such awesome purchasing power that they write their own ticket. If they don't like your prices, they'll go vertical and do it themselves--or they'll find someone that will meet their terms."

In the summer of 1995, Garson asserts, Wal-Mart did just that. "They had awarded us a contract, and in their wisdom, they changed the terms so dramatically that they really reneged." Garson, still worried about litigation, won't provide details. "But when you lose a customer that size, they are irreplaceable."

Lovable was already feeling intense cost pressure. Less than three years after Wal-Mart pulled its business, in its 72nd year, Lovable closed. "They leave a lot to be desired in the way they treat people," says Garson. "Their actions to pulverize people are unnecessary. Wal-Mart chewed us up and spit us out."

Believe it or not, American business has been through this before. The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., the grocery-store chain, stood astride the U.S. market in the 1920s and 1930s with a dominance that has likely never been duplicated. At its peak, A&P had five times the number of stores Wal-Mart has now (although much smaller ones), and at one point, it owned 80% of the supermarket business. Some of the antipredatory-pricing laws in use today were inspired by A&P's attempts to muscle its suppliers.

There is very little academic and statistical study of Wal-Mart's impact on the health of its suppliers and virtually nothing in the last decade, when Wal-Mart's size has increased by a factor of five. This while the retail industry has become much more concentrated. In large part, that's because it's nearly impossible to get meaningful data that would allow researchers to track the influence of Wal-Mart's business on companies over time. You'd need cooperation from the vendor companies or Wal-Mart or both--and neither Wal-Mart nor its suppliers are interested in sharing such intimate detail.

Bain & Co., the global management consulting firm, is in the midst of a project that asks, How does a company have a healthy relationship with Wal-Mart? How do you avoid being sucked into the vortex? How do you maintain some standing, some leverage of your own?

This July, in a mating that had the relieved air of lovers who had too long resisted embracing, Levi Strauss rolled blue jeans into every Wal-Mart in the United States. Bain's first insights are obvious, if not easy. "Year after year," Carey, a partner at Bain & Co., says, "for any product that is the same as what you sold them last year, Wal-Mart will say, 'Here's the price you gave me last year. Here's what I can get a competitor's product for. Here's what I can get a private-label version for. I want to see a better value that I can bring to my shopper this year. Or else I'm going to use that shelf space differently.' "

Carey has a friend in the umbrella business who learned that. One year, because of costs, he went to Wal-Mart and asked for a 5% price increase. "Wal-Mart said, 'We were expecting a 5% decrease. We're off by 10%. Go back and sharpen your pencil.' " The umbrella man scrimped and came back with a 2% increase. "They said, 'We'll go with a Chinese manufacturer'--and he was out entirely."

The Wal-Mart squeeze means vendors have to be as relentless and as microscopic as Wal-Mart is at managing their own costs. They need, in fact, to turn themselves into shadow versions of Wal-Mart itself. "Wal-Mart won't necessarily say you have to reconfigure your distribution system," says Carey. "But companies recognize they are not going to maintain margins with growth in their Wal-Mart business without doing it."

The way to avoid being trapped in a spiral of growing business and shrinking profits, says Carey, is to innovate. "You need to bring Wal-Mart new products--products consumers need. Because with those, Wal-Mart doesn't have benchmarks to drive you down in price. They don't have historical data, you don't have competitors, they haven't bid the products out to private-label makers. That's how you can have higher prices and higher margins."

Reasonable advice, but not universally useful. There has been an explosion of "innovation" in toothbrushes and toothpastes in the past five years, for instance; but a pickle is a pickle is a pickle.

Bain's other critical discovery is that consumers are often more loyal to product companies than to Wal-Mart. With strongly branded items people develop a preference for--things like toothpaste or laundry detergent--Wal-Mart rarely forces shoppers to switch to a second choice. It would simply punish itself by seeing sales fall, and it won't put up with that for long.

But as Wal-Mart has grown in market reach and clout, even manufacturers known for nurturing premium brands may find themselves overpowered. This July, in a mating that had the relieved air of lovers who had too long resisted embracing, Levi Strauss rolled blue jeans into every Wal-Mart doorway in the United States: 2,864 stores. Wal-Mart, seeking to expand its clothing business with more fashionable brands, promoted the clothes on its in-store TV network and with banners slipped over the security-tag detectors at exit doors.

Levi's launch into Wal-Mart came the same summer the clothes maker celebrated its 150th birthday. For a century and a half, one of the most recognizable names in American commerce had survived without Wal-Mart. But in October 2002, when Levi Strauss and Wal-Mart announced their engagement, Levi was shrinking rapidly. The pressure on Levi goes back 25 years--well before Wal-Mart was an influence. Between 1981 and 1990, Levi closed 58 U.S. manufacturing plants, sending 25% of its sewing overseas.

Sales for Levi peaked in 1996 at $7.1 billion. By last year, they had spiraled down six years in a row, to $4.1 billion; through the first six months of 2003, sales dropped another 3%. This one account--selling jeans to Wal-Mart--could almost instantly revive Levi.

Last year, Wal-Mart sold more clothing than any other retailer in the country. It also sold more pairs of jeans than any other store. Wal-Mart's own inexpensive house brand of jeans, Faded Glory, is estimated to do $3 billion in sales a year, a house brand nearly the size of Levi Strauss. Perhaps most revealing in terms of Levi's strategic blunders: In 2002, half the jeans sold in the United States cost less than $20 a pair. That same year, Levi didn't offer jeans for less than $30.

For much of the last decade, Levi couldn't have qualified to sell to Wal-Mart. Its computer systems were antiquated, and it was notorious for delivering clothes late to retailers. Levi admitted its on-time delivery rate was 65%. When it announced the deal with Wal-Mart last year, one fashion-industry analyst bluntly predicted Levi would simply fail to deliver the jeans.

But Levi Strauss has taken to the Wal-Mart Way with the intensity of a near-death religious conversion--and Levi's executives were happy to talk about their experience getting ready to sell at Wal-Mart. One hundred people at Levi's headquarters are devoted to the new business; another 12 have set up in an office in Bentonville, near Wal-Mart's headquarters, where the company has hired a respected veteran Wal-Mart sales account manager.

Getting ready for Wal-Mart has been like putting Levi on the Atkins diet. It has helped everything--customer focus, inventory management, speed to market. It has even helped other retailers that buy Levis, because Wal-Mart has forced the company to replenish stores within two days instead of Levi's previous five-day cycle.

And so, Wal-Mart might rescue Levi Strauss. Except for one thing.

Levi didn't actually have any clothes it could sell at Wal-Mart. Everything was too expensive. It had to develop a fresh line for mass retailers: the Levi Strauss Signature brand, featuring Levi Strauss's name on the back of the jeans.

Two months after the launch, Levi basked in the honeymoon glow. Overall sales, after falling for the first six months of 2003, rose 6% in the third quarter; profits in the summer quarter nearly doubled. All, Levi's CEO said, because of Signature.

"They are all very rational people. And they had a good point. Everyone was willing to pay more for a Master Lock. But how much more can they justify?" But the low-end business isn't a business Levi is known for, or one it had been particularly interested in. It's also a business in which Levi will find itself competing with lean, experienced players such as VF and Faded Glory. Levi's makeover might so improve its performance with its non-Wal-Mart suppliers that its established business will thrive, too. It is just as likely that any gains will be offset by the competitive pressures already dissolving Levi's premium brands, and by the cannibalization of its own sales. "It's hard to see how this relationship will boost Levi's higher-end business," says Paul Farris, a professor at the University of Virginia's Darden Graduate School of Business Administration. "It's easy to see how this will hurt the higher-end business."

If Levi clothing is a runaway hit at Wal-Mart, that may indeed rescue Levi as a business. But what will have been rescued? The Signature line--it includes clothing for girls, boys, men, and women--is an odd departure for a company whose brand has long been an American icon. Some of the jeans have the look, the fingertip feel, of pricier Levis. But much of the clothing has the look and feel it must have, given its price (around $23 for adult pants): cheap. Cheap and disappointing to find labeled with Levi Strauss's name. And just five days before the cheery profit news, Levi had another announcement: It is closing its last two U.S. factories, both in San Antonio, and laying off more than 2,500 workers, or 21% of its workforce. A company that 22 years ago had 60 clothing plants in the United States--and that was known as one of the most socially reponsible corporations on the planet--will, by 2004, not make any clothes at all. It will just import them.

In the end, of course, it is we as shoppers who have the power, and who have given that power to Wal-Mart. Part of Wal-Mart's dominance, part of its insight, and part of its arrogance, is that it presumes to speak for American shoppers.

If Wal-Mart doesn't like the pricing on something, says Andrew Whitman, who helped service Wal-Mart for years when he worked at General Foods and Kraft, they simply say, "At that price we no longer think it's a good value to our shopper. Therefore, we don't think we should carry it."

Wal-Mart has also lulled shoppers into ignoring the difference between the price of something and the cost. Its unending focus on price underscores something that Americans are only starting to realize about globalization: Ever-cheaper prices have consequences. Says Steve Dobbins, president of thread maker Carolina Mills: "We want clean air, clear water, good living conditions, the best health care in the world--yet we aren't willing to pay for anything manufactured under those restrictions."

Randall Larrimore, a former CEO of MasterBrand Industries, the parent company of Master Lock, understands that contradiction too well. For years, he says, as manufacturing costs in the United States rose, Master Lock was able to pass them along. But at some point in the 1990s, Asian manufacturers started producing locks for much less. "When the difference is $1, retailers like Wal-Mart would prefer to have the brand-name padlock or faucet or hammer," Larrimore says. "But as the spread becomes greater, when our padlock was $9, and the import was $6, then they can offer the consumer a real discount by carrying two lines. Ultimately, they may only carry one line."

In January 1997, Master Lock announced that, after 75 years making locks in Milwaukee, it would begin importing more products from Asia. Not too long after, Master Lock opened a factory of its own in Nogales, Mexico. Today, it makes just 10% to 15% of its locks in Milwaukee--its 300 employees there mostly make parts that are sent to Nogales, where there are now 800 factory workers.

Larrimore did the first manufacturing layoffs at Master Lock. He negotiated with Master Lock's unions himself. He went to Bentonville. "I loved dealing with Wal-Mart, with Home Depot," he says. "They are all very rational people. There wasn't a whole lot of room for negotiation. And they had a good point. Everyone was willing to pay more for a Master Lock. But how much more can they justify? If they can buy a lock that has arguably similar qual-ity, at a cheaper price, well, they can get their consumers a deal."

It's Wal-Mart in the role of Adam Smith's invisible hand. And the Milwaukee employees of Master Lock who shopped at Wal-Mart to save money helped that hand shove their own jobs right to Nogales. Not consciously, not directly, but inevitably. "Do we as consumers appreciate what we're doing?" Larrimore asks. "I don't think so. But even if we do, I think we say, Here's a Master Lock for $9, here's another lock for $6--let the other guy pay $9."

Charles Fishman (cnfish@mindspring.com ) is a senior writer at Fast Company . Andrew Moesel provided research assistance for this story.


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: business; chinamart; giantpicklejar; globalism; monopoly; supersize; trade; walmart; walmarthell
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To: Question_Assumptions
Have you priced Microsoft Office lately? Better yet, price Microsoft Project. Or look at their compilers. Now compare to what they charged when they had competitors in Borland, WordPerfect, Lotus, etc.

I would argue that Microsoft was in competition (with Borland, WordPerfect, Lotus) because they offered similar products. The newer, more expensive, products are as a result of Microsoft's own innovation. What stopped Borland, WordPerfect, Lotus, or anyone else from coming up with their own Microsoft Office? Did Microsoft send someone over there to "rough them up"? Lastly, if Microsoft products were too expensive they wouldn't sell.

(sigh) Why does everyone always bring Ma Bell into these discussions? We won't write a novel here, but I'd like to point out a few things:

A number of competing telephone systems had blossomed in the early part of the century, and in some cases people served by one system could not be connected with people hooked to another in the same area. Moreover, the most serious threat to AT&T was not competition from other companies; it was the threat of being taken over by the federal government to be run as an arm of the Post Office. This was a very real concern, and in view of the fact that other major countries ended up with government-owned telephone systems which often performed badly, we owe Ma Bell a great debt for keeping the U.S. telephone industry in private hands.

What the government did to Ma Bell was to place it under tight control, with bureaucratic management, and then suddenly expose it to competition from other firms who are free to select their markets. They were following pricing (or rate-making) rules that had been worked out over time by public authorities. The company's assignment had been to promote widespread use of an essential necessity, the telephone. It carried out this mission and then, abruptly, FCC and federal court decisions brought a radical change in the rules. Cool huh?

The mistake, which both the public and Bell accepted, was in believing that anybody should be granted a business monopoly enforceable by law. It's true that the early telephone industry appeared chaotic and inefficient when two telephone systems in the same area could not connect with each other. In short order, however, the needs of the customers, merger, or improved technology would have overcome this problem. And "natural" monopolies, to the extent that they exist, become outmoded. The railroads, for example, once had a monopoly on fast overland transport; this was quickly bypassed by the trucking industry in the 1930s.

As I said earlier, most people would argue that my views on government regulation of business are nuts. I beg to differ (naturally).
121 posted on 01/17/2005 2:08:17 PM PST by Jaysun (DEMOCRATS: "We need to be more effective at fooling people.")
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To: Physicist
All those reasons you give for hating AT&T are reasons to love Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart is a search-and-destroy engine for bureaucrats, deadwood and unnecessary costs of every description.

Up to a point, yes. There is a difference between encouraging efficiency and gutting a company. AT&T can illustrate that, too, though that was AT&T's fault, in my opinion.

It doesn't help when the pressure to cut costs stops cutting fat and starts cutting muscle and bone and morally wounds an otherwise good company. If we had a cash economy without credit, that might not be as big of a problem but business credit makes failed companies a problem. Why? Because someone has to cover all of the unpaid debts.

Finally, I've read articles attributing illegal, or at least unethical, behavior to Wal-Mart, including changing the conditions of contracts after they've been signed, claiming things they are not entitled to, and holding up payments to hurt vendors (you can send a business under if you don't pay them for a big lot of goods). That's the same sort of anti-competative behavior that Microsoft has been accused of. Is it all true? Maybe not all of it, but I personally believe that at least some of it is true. And that's not looking out for my best interest, either.

122 posted on 01/17/2005 2:11:39 PM PST by Question_Assumptions
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To: Question_Assumptions
Second, did Boeing or McDonnell-Douglass accept terms that put their businesses in peril?

Possibly. MD is no longer in the commercial airliner business.

If Boeing didn't sell to American Airlines, would most of their business dry up?

No, but it would be impacted.

You seem to think that a vendor simply MUST sell to Wal-Mart to stay in business. Wal-Mart doesn't carry Haggar or Dockers slacks, for instance, and both of those suppliers seem to do OK elsewhere.

No one forces anyone to buy at or do business with Wal-Mart.

123 posted on 01/17/2005 2:12:52 PM PST by sinkspur ("How dare you presume to tell God what He cannot do" God Himself)
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To: Jaysun
Have you ever known a company to grow into a "monopoly" and then raise prices? No. The fact of the matter is that they have to please the consumer or die. That's regulation enough for me

Actually companies do that. It's called supply and demand. In a perfect competitive market, suppliers will continue to create products until demand is fully satisfied. This leads to a lowering of prices through competition until the economic profit is just enough to keep a company in the market. If oversupply occurs, companies fold, if under supply, they enter the market and compete. They do this to such a level that one additional item of supply will produce zero profit due to the size of supply.

Now in a monopoly environment, you do not look to maximize supply, you look to maximize profit. What this means is that you do not meet all of demand, you meet only enough demand to keep your profit margin at a high rate, which means you charge more and produce less then what the market can suck up.

Because of lack of competition, you get fewer advances and services. Look at the US phone industry under AT&T. Did you have Call Waiting? Did you have low priced long distance? How about Two Way Calling? Hell, what about even a choice of phones? Nope, nada, none of that. That's a monopoly for you.

Here's a text book explanation:

Encyclopedia: Monopoly Sponsored links:

:Alternate use: Monopoly (game)

In economics, a monopoly (from the Greek monos, one + polein, to sell) is defined as a market situation where there is only one provider of a product or service. Monopolies are characterized by a lack of economic competition for the good or service that they provide (and a lack of viable substitute goods), as well as high barriers to entry for potential competitors on the market.

Monopoly should be distinguished from monopsony, in which there is only one buyer of the product or service; it should also, strictly, be distinguished from the (similar) phenomenon of a cartel. In a monopoly a single firm is the sole provider of a product or service; in a cartel a centralized institution is set up to partially coordinate the actions of several independent providers (which is a form of oligopoly).

Forms of monopoly

Monopolies are often distinguished based on the circumstances under which they arise; terminologies differ, but one of the most common is to distinguish natural monopoly (also known as de facto monopoly) from government-granted monopoly (also known as de jure monopoly or coercive monopoly).

A monopoly can arise because of the peculiar features of a particular market — such as when a monopolist controls a unique natural resource, a public transport line or technological achievement. A monopoly can also arise from "fair" competition, when a single provider of a good or a service is chosen extensively or exclusively by the marketplace. Such monopolies are termed de facto monopolies. However, there are not examples of perfect "de facto" monopolies: The most effective "de facto" monopoly in recent times has been the De Beers diamond trading company, which held slightly less than 90 percent of the world diamond market in the mid-1980s.

When a monopoly arises from laws which explicitly forbid competition (or effectively prevent it through heavy regulation and subsidy), it is described as a "de jure monopoly", or government-granted monopoly (sometimes called a coercive monopoly). The term state monopoly is sometimes used to describe a type of government-granted monopoly in which government, either directly or indirectly through legislation, exercises significant control over the monopolist's decisions, and typically include industries that import, manufacture, and/or distribute alcohol, money, stamps, drugs, munitions, and gambling. An example of a "de jure" monopoly is AT&T, which was granted monopoly power by the US government, only to be broken up in 1982 following a Sherman Antitrust suit.

The term "natural monopoly" is sometimes used to describe monopolies that come about because production conditions make a sole provider most efficient. Examples of a natural monopoly would be power distribution, water distribution or sewage transport to and from private households, as it is usually not practical for a single household to have more than one power line, water pipe or sewage pipe to the house.

The term is sometimes (loosely) used to describe companies such as Microsoft or Standard Oil, which do face market competition, but which command a large market share and use their size to compete in ways which are considered "unfair" — such as dumping products below cost to harm competitors, creating tying arrangements between their products, and other practices regulated under Antitrust law. However, since the products of the aforementioned companies do not fall into a unique category, but into a category of generalised or differentiated products, the suppliers are not engaged in monopolistic practises, but in practices known as "monopolistic competition".

Large corporations often attempt to monopolize markets through horizontal integration, in which a parent company controls consolidates control over several small, seemingly diverse companies (sometimes even using different branding to create the illusion of marketplace competition). A magazine publishing firm, for example, might publish many different magazines on many different subjects, but it would still be considered to engage in monopolistic practices if the intent of doing this was to control the entire magazine-reader market, and prevent the emergence of competitors.

Monopoly and efficiency

The economic incentives for a monoply make it likely that they will sell a lower quantity of goods at a higher price than firms would in a purely competitive market in order to secure monopoly profits. This will typically lead to an outcome which is inefficient in the sense of Pareto efficiency. It is also often argued that monopolies tend to become less efficient and innovative over time, becoming "complacent giants", because they don't have to be efficient or innovative to compete in the marketplace. Some argue that it is good to allow a firm to attempt to monopolize a market, since practices such as dumping can benefit consumers in the short term. Once the firm grows too big, it can then be dealt with via regulation.

Sometimes, though, this very loss of efficiency can raise the potential value of a competitor enough to overcome market entry barriers, or provide incentive for research and investment into new alternatives.

When monopolies are not broken through the open market, often a government will step in to either regulate the monopoly, or forcibly break it up (see Antitrust law). Public utilities in many locations are an example of the former. AT&T and Standard Oil are good examples of the latter. When AT&T was broken up into the "Baby Bell" components, MCI, Sprint, and other companies were able to compete effectively in the long-distance phone market and started to take phone traffic from the less efficient AT&T.

Economic analysis

In economics a company is said to have monopoly power if it faces a downward sloping demand curve (see supply and demand). This is in contrast to a price taker that faces a horizontal demand curve. A price taker cannot choose the price that they sell at, since if they set it above the equilibrium price, they will sell none, and if they set it below the equilibrium price, they will have an infinite number of buyers (and be making less money than they could if they sold at the equilibrium price). In contrast, a business with monopoly power can choose the price they want to sell at. If they set it higher, they sell less. If they set it lower, they sell more.

If a monopoly can only set one price it will set it where marginal cost (MC) equals marginal revenue (MR) as seen on the below diagram. This can be seen on a supply and demand diagram for the firm. This will be at the quantity Qm and at the price Pm. This is above the competitive price of Pc and with a smaller quantity that the competitive quantity of Qc. The profit the monopoly gains is the shaded in area labeled profit.

absolute value) for most customers is less than one, it is very advantageous to increase the price: the seller gets more money for less goods. With an increase of the price the price elasticity tends to rise, and in the optimum mentioned above it will for most customers be above one.

124 posted on 01/17/2005 2:16:42 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: Question_Assumptions
I don't trust Wal-Mart to care about the quality of the goods they sell nor do I ultimate want them making decisions about the trade-off between price and quality on my behalf

Wal-Mart does exactly what its customers demand. They want you to like what you buy there. If people don't like the quality of the Levi's, people will stop buying them, even if they're inexpensive. If Wal-Mart finds that the better-quality pants on the next rack sell more units, that's what they'll stock. If the cheap Levi's sell well, it's because people find the quality acceptable at the price offered.

Is the country a better place if people spend more for better pants? That's not obvious to me.

That's fine if you have access to Amazon. Not so fine if you live in the middle of nowhere, don't have a computer, and Wal-Mart is the only big-box retailer in town.

Oh, but then you're in luck! Wal-Mart sells computers cheaper than anyplace else. Linux machines, too, for those who hate Microsoft.

125 posted on 01/17/2005 2:20:38 PM PST by Physicist
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To: AmusedBystander
Oh, I'm not happy with the outsourcing done by the other marts either. Sending off to China for what can and should be made in America is UnAmerican, to the point that the Founding Fathers were against it (well it was Britian and France then, not China). That is why the emplaced tariffs on all goods that could be made in America.

But unfortunetly all that did was create the biggest manufacturing nation in the world, what horrid results. /sarcasm

126 posted on 01/17/2005 2:20:56 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: conservativebabe

Who can't hold a one gallon jar of pickles in one hand? What are they talking about?


127 posted on 01/17/2005 2:22:02 PM PST by little jeremiah (The "Gay Agenda" exists only in the minds of little jeremiah and his cohort. - Modern Man)
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To: conservativebabe

So you're one of those who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing....eh?

WallyWorld pulled the trigger after the picklepeople put the loaded gun to their own heads.


128 posted on 01/17/2005 2:26:51 PM PST by ninenot (Minister of Membership, TomasTorquemadaGentlemen'sClub)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

SOME economists do that.

OTHERS say that the Fed's actions in creating a negative interest rate AND loading Bank Reserves allowed the banks to lend money to consumers,

Who promptly re-financed their homes and sent money to PRChina.


129 posted on 01/17/2005 2:30:21 PM PST by ninenot (Minister of Membership, TomasTorquemadaGentlemen'sClub)
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To: jb6
Walmart is not the reason jobs are being sent overseas.

GREED is the reason jobs are being sent overseas.

Just for arguments sake let's take 2 pro-dim companies: Tommy Hilfiger & Nike products are all made overseas. That means it is cheaper for them to be made. Is the savings in manufacturing passed on to the consumer by these companies? Heck NO! Their prices continue to soar.

This is just more Dim babble brought to you courtesy of the Lame Stream Media.

130 posted on 01/17/2005 2:31:38 PM PST by 100%FEDUP (I'm seeing RED!)
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To: Jaysun
I would argue that Microsoft was in competition (with Borland, WordPerfect, Lotus) because they offered similar products. The newer, more expensive, products are as a result of Microsoft's own innovation.

I disagree. A lot of the "innovations" that Microsoft adds to Word or Excel are negligible for most users. Many users were upgrading Office simply so they could open files created by newer versions. They weren't upgrading for the features. Of course a lot of home version of Office are pirated and it's largely businesses that now pay for it. They're the only ones usually buying MS Project, too, which is why the price is so steep. And they better license or else.

What stopped Borland, WordPerfect, Lotus, or anyone else from coming up with their own Microsoft Office? Did Microsoft send someone over there to "rough them up"? Lastly, if Microsoft products were too expensive they wouldn't sell.

While I blame Lotus for what happened to Lotus, you are aware that there are still lawsuits being filed over this ,right? Also, when Microsoft's products are too expensive, people pirate them. There is plenty of that going on, much to Microsoft's annoyance. I think that's part of the reason why they started selling lower cost "Small Business" and Word-only licenses.

(sigh) Why does everyone always bring Ma Bell into these discussions?

Because it's the classic recent case of monopoly busting.

The mistake, which both the public and Bell accepted, was in believing that anybody should be granted a business monopoly enforceable by law.

Well, if it's a mistake, then someone should tell the people regulating the cable television industry.

It's true that the early telephone industry appeared chaotic and inefficient when two telephone systems in the same area could not connect with each other. In short order, however, the needs of the customers, merger, or improved technology would have overcome this problem.

You are assuming that the competitors would have switched to a cooperative model rather than trying to drive each other out of business with proprietary technologies. I don't have a lot of faith in that sort of cooperation, and even where open standards exists, Microsoft and other vendors keep trying to change them in their own products so they can control them and shut competitors out of business. I'll also point you back toward what happened to WordPerfect with respect to the Windows API controlled by Microsoft.

And "natural" monopolies, to the extent that they exist, become outmoded. The railroads, for example, once had a monopoly on fast overland transport; this was quickly bypassed by the trucking industry in the 1930s.

I'm not concerned about a natural monopoly that exists because nobody else wants to compete. I'm concerned about monopolies that exist because nobody else can compete. It's only a matter of time before that sort of power gets abused.

131 posted on 01/17/2005 2:35:00 PM PST by Question_Assumptions
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To: CyberAnt

"There are 2 reasons Walmart is being attacked:"

Try "Monopolistic and unfair business practices".


132 posted on 01/17/2005 2:38:29 PM PST by shellshocked
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To: 100%FEDUP; A. Pole; ninenot
Walmart demands a 5% cost cut on all vendors each and every year. The problem for the Vendor becomes this: when they first get involved with Walmart, it sucks up so much volume, that it becomes the major factor for their profit margin. Unfortunately the 5% cut yearly quickly adds up, after which the company is forced to either lose a massive amount of their business (and maybe go out of business now vs later) or ship jobs overseas and put off the inevitable for some time. Thus our manufacturing goes off.

Furthermore, other marts to compete are forcing the same thing on their vendors, thus accelerating the trend.

133 posted on 01/17/2005 2:41:12 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: Physicist
Wal-Mart does exactly what its customers demand. They want you to like what you buy there. If people don't like the quality of the Levi's, people will stop buying them, even if they're inexpensive. If Wal-Mart finds that the better-quality pants on the next rack sell more units, that's what they'll stock. If the cheap Levi's sell well, it's because people find the quality acceptable at the price offered.

Does Wal-Mart have a better-quality pair of pants on the next rack? From what I've seen with certain items, I don't think that's always the case.

Is the country a better place if people spend more for better pants? That's not obvious to me.

No, and that's not what I'm saying. What I'm saying is that the country is a better place if I have a choice. One option is not a choice. Wal-Mart seems to offer one option--cheap.

Oh, but then you're in luck! Wal-Mart sells computers cheaper than anyplace else. Linux machines, too, for those who hate Microsoft.

If you're buying a $5 pair of pants, even a $300 computer (+$10 a month Internet access, etc.) might be too much for you.

By the way, I do think there is one good thing that Wal-Mart does. I'm happy that they demand that music companies produce clean versions of CDs without obscenities to sell in their stores. I prefer to buy music that's clean, like you hear on the radio. I like that because it's an area where Wal-Mart is actually expanding my choices. Now if they could only get movie companies to do the same with DVDs...

134 posted on 01/17/2005 2:50:59 PM PST by Question_Assumptions
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To: jb6
But what really makes it a problem is that a company doesn't fail as soon as it ceases to be profitable. Wal-Mart can drive a vendor deep into the red and then ultimately out of business trying to keep up with those 5% cuts. What happens to all of that debt when the company folds and who ultimate benefits from it?
135 posted on 01/17/2005 2:53:35 PM PST by Question_Assumptions
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To: conservativebabe
...these companies have made a business out of making people pay more than need be for products...

Poppycock. Nobody puts a gun to your head and makes you buy the more expensive product. There was already competition among various brands before WalMart.

Perhaps you should take an economics class to better understand how retail prices are (or at least, were, pre-WalMart) set.

WalMart is quickly becoming a de facto retail monopoly, with all the economic mess that comes with that title. I'm as big of a cheerleader for capitalism as you're likely to find, but I believe there is such thing as too much market control in too few hands. Microsoft and WalMart are both in that rarified club where the normal rules of capitalist economics become distorted and so don't quite work right. When this environment exists, then the benefits of capitalism can be lost. Has the consumer benefited from a situation that destroys all but one or two competitors in a given market? If the only denim jeans available in 2010 are either sub-$20 WalMart jeans or $250 fashion jeans, has the consumer been helped?

I think the article makes a good point that, while competition is normally a good thing, and increased efficiency benefits the consumer, the extreme levels of influence and pressure which are brought to bear with a behemoth presence like WalMart may turn a good thing into a bad thing in the long run.

136 posted on 01/17/2005 2:55:48 PM PST by TChris (Most people's capability for inference is severely overestimated)
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To: Question_Assumptions
I think that you and most Wal-Mart bashers miss the point of 'quality goods'. You must understand that, in this age, some folks don't necessarily want goods to last a lifetime.

It reminds me of my grandfather who was proud of his Sears catalog hammer that he had for forty years. He said that he only had to replace the head twice and the handle three times. I've seen posters here bragging about their quality ties that they have been wearing for twenty years. LOL

Face it, folks, most people want to pay a reasonable price for a product that may become become unfashionable or antiquated in time. Thus, they can afford to throw it away and update in fashion and technology at Wal Mart once again.
137 posted on 01/17/2005 2:59:25 PM PST by Conservababe
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To: Wally_Kalbacken
--exactly. Amusingly, along that line, my sister works part-time for the C of C in a somewhat larger than 11000 pop Milwaukee suburb.

The official position of the chamber was "keep Walmart out" of course. In the meantime, my sister would almost always see someone from her area at the nearest Walmart, 15 miles away---

138 posted on 01/17/2005 3:00:40 PM PST by rellimpank (urban dwellers don' t understand the cultural deprivation of not being raised on a farm)
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To: jb6

I didn't get past the sinister description of the Vlasic pickles.

For crying out loud. It's a store selling a jar of pickles. The HORROR of it all!!!!!!!!!

Good grief.


139 posted on 01/17/2005 3:02:53 PM PST by cyncooper
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To: jb6

that reminds me, i forgot to buy something over at wal-mart.


140 posted on 01/17/2005 3:04:48 PM PST by ken21 (no offense intended.)
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