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Wal-Mart Wage Hikes Backfire (Again) As Angry Employees Threaten To Quit
Zero Hedge ^ | 08/07/2015 | Tyler Durden

Posted on 08/07/2015 9:41:25 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Last week, in "Economics 101: Wal-Mart Hikes Wages, Prepares To Fire 1000," we highlighted an internal memo circulated at Arkansas recruiting firm Cameron Smith & Associates.

The letter, which was obtained by the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, advised employees to prepare for an expected wave of layoffs at WalMart’s home office in Bentonville. "Please remember, these people are our neighbors and friends," Cameron Smith tells his recruiters, "you have a skill that will be very much in need when this goes down."

The retail giant has received quite a bit of scrutiny this year (more than usual), after abruptly and simultaneously closing five geographically distinct stores in April. The company cited "plumbing issues", but many of the 2,500 or so affected employees weren’t buying it and neither was the chorus of Jade Helm 15 conspiracy theorists who suggested that the shuttered stores were being set up as internment camps as part of a wider government plot to institute martial law.

We had a different explanation for Wal-Mart’s "clogs and leaks": Earlier this year, WalMart became one of several corporate heavyweights to lift wages for its meagerly compensated workers, around 500,000 of which are now set to receive at least $9/hour and $10/hour by Q1 2016. Meanwhile, the move by the country’s largest retailer to pay a few extra pennies to its (basically) minimum wage employees comes at a cost to the company’s suppliers because when you operate on the thinnest of margins in order to be the "low price leader," someone has to pay for those wage hikes and you can’t pass along the costs to customers because many of your low-income patrons are operating from the same tax bracket as your low-paid employees. If you can’t extract enough pricing concessions from suppliers, well then, "creative" solutions must be found, so bring in the "plumbers."

But the across-the-board wage hikes instituted in April will cost WalMart around $1 billion this year alone, and because it looks like making up reasons to close entire stores is now off the table thanks to the nation’s newfound fascination with plumbing, it might come down to good old fashioned layoffs in Bentonville, where higher paid workers will ultimately pay the price for the minimum wage hike. 

All of this is set against a larger debate about the pay floor.

Pressure has grown in America for employers to pay higher wages to workers who cannot earn enough to make ends meet. Soaring rents and crippling student debt aren’t doing anything to help the situation. Of course there are unintended consequences that go along with raising wages. 

The standard criticism is that forcing employers to pay more will simply result in layoffs and/or a reduced propensity to hire, but as we saw with Dan Price and Gravity Payments, there are a whole lot of other things that can go wrong. 

For instance, higher paid employees may not understand why everyone under them in the corporate structure suddenly makes more money and if people who are higher up on the corporate ladder don’t receive raises that keep the hierarchy proportional they may simply quit. Don’t look now, but that’s exactly what’s happening at Wal-Mart. Here’s Bloomberg:

When Wal-Mart Stores Inc. chief Doug McMillon announced plans to boost store workers’ minimum wage earlier this year, he said the move was intended to improve morale and retain employees.

 

Yet for some of the hundreds of thousands of workers getting no raise, the policy is having the opposite effect.

 

In interviews and in hundreds of comments on Facebook, Wal-Mart employees are calling the move unfair to senior workers who got no increase and now make the same or close to what newer, less experienced colleagues earn. New workers started making a minimum of $9 an hour in April and will get at least $10 an hour in February.

 

"It is pitting people against each other," said Charmaine Givens-Thomas, a 10-year Wal-Mart veteran. "It hurts morale when people feel like they aren’t being appreciated. I hear people every day talking about looking for other jobs and wanting to remove themselves from Wal-Mart and a job that will make them feel like that."

 

If Wal-Mart and other retailers don’t also adjust pay for veteran hourly workers, they could face rising dissent, said David Cooper, an economic analyst at the Economic Policy Institute. Typically, when employers boost their base pay, they also give raises to those making within $1 to $2 of the new minimum to preserve a type of wage hierarchy and keep their longer-time workers happy, studies show.

 

"Companies want to preserve some type of internal wage ladder, so to do that they have to adjust wages of folks above the new minimum," Cooper said. If Wal-Mart doesn’t raise wages for these workers, "folks are going to leave or start complaining more vocally," he said.

Of course raising wages for those "around" the new minimum (i.e. preserving the wage hierarchy) will cost money - a lot of it. "Giving additional raises to employees already making close to the new minimum wage would cost Wal-Mart about $400 million," one researcher at UMass Amherst told Bloomberg. 

So ultimately, raising the minimum for the lowest paid Wal-Mart workers to just $9/hour will end up costing 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.

At the end of the day, it all comes back to one simple thing: this money has to come from somewhere, and since this is one instance where rising labor costs absolutely can't be passed on to customers, it will need to be extracted elsewhere. Many workers clearly understand this: "...workers also said they suspect their hours are being cut and annual raises reduced to cover the cost of the wage increase for newer workers."

Their suspicions would be correct. It's economics 101. It's also common sense. We'll give the last word to forklift operator Sal Fuentes:

"They give you some but they are taking away something else. It has always been like that."



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: minimumwage; walmart
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To: grania
You and I and every US taxpayer are subsidizing the benefits they get because their wages are too low for self-sufficiency.

Yeppers, it's all the fault of Walmart and not the government; hurrah for bigger government !!!

21 posted on 08/07/2015 11:36:34 AM PDT by celmak (Long live the Non-Demorat Christian Conservative South !!!)
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To: celmak
I'll agree that the way to solve the problem would be for the gov not to give any benefits above a level of bare-bones survival. Along with that, tariffs and restrictions on non-citizen labor to protect workers so they could get a living wage would be the other part of a solution.

What we have now is rigged to subsidize the corporate monsters at the sacrifice of us little folks.

22 posted on 08/07/2015 11:45:51 AM PDT by grania
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To: SeekAndFind

For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.


23 posted on 08/07/2015 12:00:53 PM PDT by rey
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To: SeekAndFind

We got some people here parroting that union sh!#. I have friends who have been with Wal-Mart for years and they would not work anywhere else. Wal-Mart is in the median of starting wages. Fact is if you are not satisfied with you circumstance go somewhere else. If you dropped out of school and have no marketable skills that’s on you not on Wal-mart. You get paid for what you know how to do that every other guy walking down the road doesn’t. Every time I query a Wal-mart worker most of the time they tell me they like to work there!!!


24 posted on 08/07/2015 12:29:12 PM PDT by ontap
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To: grania
When I see posts like yours, it amazes me how successful the Leftists have become in getting people to parrot Marx and Engels in conservative forums and be serious about it.

The Waltons are worth more than almost all nations on the planet. I hope this is hyperbole. Maybe worth more than Luxembourg but Denmark surpasses the 150 billion net worth of the Walton's in 2014.

However, it is the first part of the Leftist attack, class warfare. Demonize the bourgeoisie!

That's more than they need

Obama has said the exact same thing.

and it's on the back of employee wages

Classic Marxism. The capitalists feed off of the sweat of the proletariat. Or as Obama put it, "you didn't build that." Sam Walton had nothing to do with risking his own funds and livelihood in buying the original bankrupt stores that would become WalMart. And certainly highly trained, educated, and experienced personnel should never be paid more than a high school dropout. That's unfair to the masses!

the workers aren't making enough to survive

From Marx to the Occupy movement to here. Amazing how some sewage will travel. One, back in that rest or the world the Waltons have more money than, 7 to 9 dollars an hour would be luxurious. Two, here in this county, you can live off of WalMart wages. You won't have a brand new car, a big house,the latest smartphone, etc. but you can survive just fine. Not easy, but it's done. That's why some people work their way up for something better but others are content with our poor being another nation's middle class.

The rest of your post veers from the Know Nothing party to anti-corporatism. But still - deficit spending made our debt impossible, not a trade deficit, which inherently is an arbitrary estimate. Those cheap foreign goods come from unions driving up the cost of labor to an unsustainable level with the early pushes for a "living wage." So now those jobs have moved to countries that are thrilled to live on those wages.

In short, you provided a clear example of how pervasive Leftism has become, whether you call it Progressive movement, Communism, Marxism, or the Living Wage movement.

25 posted on 08/07/2015 3:21:12 PM PDT by Ophiucus
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To: redgolum
The majority of people working at Walmart are on public assistance of some sort. So quite frankly, I am paying for them even if I don’t show there.True that, and in fact most of the shoppers too.
26 posted on 08/07/2015 3:32:10 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: grania

Great post.


27 posted on 08/07/2015 3:39:44 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: celmak

My family were the first settlers of Benton County. My 3d Grandfather was the first Clerk of Court. When one of my grand uncles died, my father and I went to a cafe on the square of Bentonville where he introduced me to Sam Walton who was in for his usual breakfast.

When I was a student of the University of Arkansas, Bentonville was a typical drying up Southern town that time had bypassed. My family had departed for greener pastures and my father and I had become professional Army Officers. Sam Walton singularly transformed Northwest Arkansas and our father and I were ignorant enough to the changes so that we missed the boat.

Those who believed in Sam Walton and did what he advised them to do are wealthy beyond our understanding. But, our stupid government and politicians are trying to craft a fantasy world so that they can capture future voters. Politicians had nothing to do with Sam Walton’s success, and any scheme that they will advance will only benefit them, no one else.


28 posted on 08/07/2015 3:49:04 PM PDT by centurion316
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To: grania
hat's more than they need,

A VERY dangerous phrase to utter in a capitalist economy.....who gets to determine that....socialism seeks to take all that excess money from those evil business people and GIVE it to others so that they may be more "equal"

That has never worked, nor will it ever. Those who don't like Wal-mart's way of doing things are perfectly able to start their own business and pay their employees as large a salary as they see fit.

29 posted on 08/07/2015 4:03:39 PM PDT by terycarl (, COMMON SENSE PREVAILS OVERALL)
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To: terycarl
You can't have a successful economy with a middle class without supply and demand determining wages. With an unlimited supply of cheap labor, here and shipping jobs overseas, workers are at an unfair disadvantage.

I don't see how my view is anti-capitalist. Between government regulation and the inability of people to make a self-sustaining wage, the population becomes wage slaves. That's fascism, not capitalism....government and large corporations working together to dominate the population.

30 posted on 08/07/2015 4:55:29 PM PDT by grania
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To: Ophiucus

In short, you provided a clear example of how pervasive Leftism has become, whether you call it Progressive movement, Communism, Marxism, or the Living Wage movement.
*************************************
Your entire posting was excellent!

Unions like to use code words like “living wage” and “working families”.


31 posted on 08/07/2015 6:02:05 PM PDT by octex
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To: octex

Thank you


32 posted on 08/09/2015 11:33:45 PM PDT by Ophiucus
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