If Wal-Mart comes to your
town, kill it
(Bullying
people from your town to China)
Jim
Hightower Corporations
rule. No other institution comes close to matching the
power that the 500 biggest corporations have amassed over
us. The clout of all 535 members of Congress is nothing
compared to the individual and collective power of these
predatory behemoths that now roam the globe, working
their will over all competing interests.
The aloof and pampered executives who run today's
autocratic and secretive corporate states have
effectively become our sovereigns. From who gets health
care to who pays taxes, from what's on the news to what's
in our food, they have usurped the people's democratic
authority and now make these broad social decisions in
private, based solely on the interests of their
corporations. Their attitude was forged back in 1882,
when the villainous old robber baron William Henry
Vanderbilt spat out: The public be damned! I'm
working for my stockholders.
The media and politicians won't discuss this, for obvious
reasons, but we must if we're actually to be a
self-governing people. That's why the Lowdown is
launching this occasional series of corporate profiles.
And why not start with the biggest and one of the worst
actors?
The beast from Bentonville
Wal-Mart is now the world's biggest corporation, having
passed Exxon/Mobil for the top slot. It hauls off a
stunning $220 billion a year from We the People (more in
revenues than the entire GDP of Israel and Ireland
combined).
Wal-Mart cultivates an aw-shucks,
we're-just-folks-from-Arkansas image of neighborly
small-town shopkeepers trying to sell stuff cheaply to
you and yours. Behind its soft homespun ads, however, is
what one union leader calls this devouring
beast of a corporation that ruthlessly stomps on
workers, neighborhoods, competitors, and suppliers.
Despite its claim that it slashes profits to the bone in
order to deliver Always Low Prices, Wal-Mart
banks about $7 billion a year in profits, ranking it
among the most profitable entities on the planet.
Of the 10 richest people in the world, five are Waltons
-- the ruling family of the Wal-Mart empire. S. Robson
Walton is ranked by London's Rich List 2001
as the wealthiest human on the planet, having sacked up
more than $65 billion (£45.3 billion) in personal wealth
and topping Bill Gates as No. 1.
Wal-Mart and the Waltons got to the top the old-fashioned
way -- by roughing people up. The corporate ethos
emanating from the Bentonville headquarters dictates two
guiding principles for all managers: extract the very
last penny possible from human toil, and squeeze the last
dime from every supplier.
With more than one million employees (three times more
than General Motors), this far-flung retailer is the
country's largest private employer, and it intends to
remake the image of the American workplace in its image
-- which is not pretty.
Yes, there is the happy-faced greeter who
welcomes shoppers into every store, and employees (or
associates, as the company grandiosely calls
them) gather just before opening each morning for a pep
rally, where they are all required to join in the
Wal-Mart cheer: Gimme a W! shouts the
cheerleader; W! the dutiful employees
respond. Gimme an A! And so on.
Behind this manufactured cheerfulness, however, is the
fact that the average employee makes only $15,000 a year
for full-time work. Most are denied even this poverty
income, for they are held to part-time work. While the
company brags that 70 percent of its workers are
full-time, at Wal-Mart full time is 28 hours
a week, meaning they gross less than $11,000 a year.
Health-care benefits? Only if you've been there two
years; then the plan hits you with such huge premiums
that few can afford it -- only 38% of Wal-Marters are
covered.
Thinking union? Get outta here! Wal-Mart is opposed
to unionization, reads a company guidebook for
supervisors. You, as a manager, are expected to
support the company's position. . . . This may mean
walking a tightrope between legitimate campaigning and
improper conduct.
Wal-Mart is in fact rabidly anti-union, deploying teams
of union-busters from Bentonville to any spot where
there's a whisper of organizing activity. While
unions might be appropriate for other companies, they
have no place at Wal-Mart, a spokeswoman told a
Texas Observer reporter who was covering an NLRB hearing
on the company's manhandling of 11 meat-cutters who
worked at a Wal-Mart SuperCenter in Jacksonville, Texas.
These derring-do employees were sick of working harder
and longer for the same low pay. We signed [union]
cards, and all hell broke loose, says Sidney Smith,
one of the Jacksonville meat-cutters who established the
first-ever Wal-Mart union in the U.S., voting in February
2000 to join the United Food and Commercial Workers.
Eleven days later, Wal-Mart announced that it was closing
the meat-cutting departments in all of its stores and
would henceforth buy prepackaged meat elsewhere.
But the repressive company didn't stop there. As the
Observer reports: Smith was fired for 'theft' after
a manger agreed to let him buy a box of overripe bananas
for 50 cents, Smith ate one banana before paying for the
box, and was judged to have stolen that banana.
Wal-Mart is an unrepentant and recidivist violator of
employee rights, drawing repeated convictions, fines, and
the ire of judges from coast to coast. For example, the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has had to file
more suits against the Bentonville billionaires club for
cases of disability discrimination than any other
corporation. A top EEOC lawyer told Business Week,
I have never seen this kind of blatant disregard
for the law.
Likewise, a national class-action suit reveals an
astonishing pattern of sexual discrimination at Wal-Mart
(where 72 percent of the salespeople are women), charging
that there is a harsh, anti-woman culture in which
complaints go unanswered and the women who make them are
targeted for retaliation.
Workers' compensation laws, child-labor laws (1,400
violations in Maine alone), surveillance of employees --
you name it, this corporation is a repeat offender. No
wonder, then, that turnover in the stores is above 50
percent a year, with many stores having to replace 100
percent of their employees each year, and some reaching
as high as a 300 percent turnover!
Worldwide wage-depressor
Then there's China. For years, Wal-Mart saturated the
airwaves with a We Buy American advertising
campaign, but it was nothing more than a
red-white-and-blue sham. All along, the vast majority of
the products it sold were from cheap-labor hell-holes,
especially China. In 1998, after several exposes of this
sham, the company finally dropped its
patriotism posture and by 2001 had even moved
its worldwide purchasing headquarters to China. Today, it
is the largest importer of Chinese-made products in the
world, buying $10 billion worth of merchandise from
several thousand Chinese factories.
As Charlie Kernaghan of the National Labor Committee
reports, In country after country, factories that
produce for Wal-Mart are the worst, adding that the
bottom-feeding labor policy of this one corporation
is actually lowering standards in China, slashing
wages and benefits, imposing long mandatory-overtime
shifts, while tolerating the arbitrary firing of workers
who even dare to discuss factory conditions.
Wal-Mart does not want the U.S. buying public to know
that its famous low prices are the product of human
misery, so while it loudly proclaims that its global
suppliers must comply with a corporate code of
conduct to treat workers decently, it strictly
prohibits the disclosure of any factory names and
addresses, hoping to keep independent sources from
witnessing the code in operation.
Kernaghan's NLC, acclaimed for its fact-packed reports on
global working conditions, found several Chinese
factories that make the toys Americans buy for their
children at Wal-Mart. Seventy-one percent of the toys
sold in the U.S. come from China, and Wal-Mart now sells
one out of five of the toys we buy.
NLC interviewed workers in China's Guangdong Province who
toil in factories making popular action figures, dolls,
and other toys sold at Wal-Mart. In Toys of
Misery, a shocking 58-page report that the
establishment media ignored, NLC describes:
13- to 16-hour days molding, assembling, and
spray-painting toys from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. or even
midnight, seven days a week, with 20-hour shifts in peak
season.
Even though China's minimum wage is 31 cents an hour --
which doesn't begin to cover a person's basic
subsistence-level needs -- these production workers are
paid 13 cents an hour.
Workers typically live in squatter shacks, seven feet by
seven feet, or jammed in company dorms, with more than a
dozen sharing a cubicle costing $1.95 a week for rent.
They pay about $5.50 a week for lousy food. They also
must pay for their own medical treatment and are fired if
they are too ill to work.
The work is literally sickening, since there's no health
and safety enforcement. Workers have constant headaches
and nausea from paint-dust hanging in the air; the indoor
temperature tops 100 degrees; protective clothing is a
joke; repetitive stress disorders are rampant; and
there's no training on the health hazards of handling the
plastics, glue, paint thinners, and other solvents in
which these workers are immersed every day.
As for Wal-Mart's highly vaunted code of
conduct, NLC could not find a single worker who had
ever seen or heard of it.
These factories employ mostly young women and teenage
girls. Wal-Mart, renowned for knowing every detail of its
global business operations and for calculating every
penny of a product's cost, knows what goes on inside
these places. Yet, when confronted with these facts,
corporate honchos claim ignorance and wash their hands of
the exploitation: There will always be people who
break the law, says CEO Lee Scott. It is an
issue of human greed among a few people.
Those few people include him, other top
managers, and the Walton billionaires. Each of them not
only knows about their company's exploitation, but
willingly prospers from a corporate culture that demands
it. Get costs down is Wal-Mart's mantra and
modus operandi, and that translates into a crusade to
stamp down the folks who produce its goods and services,
shamelessly building its low-price strategy and profits
on their backs.
The Wal-Mart gospel
Worse, Wal-Mart is on a messianic mission to extend its
exploitative ethos to the entire business world. More
than 65,000 companies supply the retailer with the stuff
on its shelves, and it constantly hammers each supplier
about cutting their production costs deeper and deeper in
order to get cheaper wholesale prices. Some companies
have to open their books so Bentonville executives can
red-pencil what CEO Scott terms unnecessary
costs.
Of course, among the unnecessaries to him are the use of
union labor and producing goods in America, and Scott is
unabashed about pointing in the direction of China or
other places for abysmally low production costs. He
doesn't even have to say Move to China -- his
purchasing executives demand such an impossible lowball
price from suppliers that they can only meet it if they
follow Wal-Mart's labor example. With its dominance over
its own 1.2 million workers and 65,000 suppliers, plus
its alliances with ruthless labor abusers abroad, this
one company is the world's most powerful private force
for lowering labor standards and stifling the
middle-class aspirations of workers everywhere.
Using its sheer size, market clout, access to capital,
and massive advertising budget, the company also is
squeezing out competitors and forcing its remaining
rivals to adopt its price-is-everything approach.
Even the big boys like Toys R Us and Kroger are daunted
by the company's brutish power, saying they're compelled
to slash wages and search the globe for sweatshop
suppliers in order to compete in the downward race to
match Wal-Mart's prices.
How high of a price are we willing to pay for Wal-Mart's
low-price model? This outfit operates with an
avarice, arrogance, and ambition that would make Enron
blush. It hits a town or city neighborhood like a
retailing neutron bomb, sucking out the economic vitality
and all of the local character. And Wal-Mart's stores now
have more kill-power than ever, with its SuperCenters
averaging 200,000 square feet -- the size of more than
four football fields under one roof! These things land
splat on top of any community's sense of itself and
devour local business.
By slashing its retail prices way below cost when it
enters a community, Wal-Mart can crush our groceries,
pharmacies, hardware stores, and other retailers, then
raise its prices once it has mono-poly control over the
market.
But, say apologists for these Big-Box megastores, at
least they're creating jobs. Wrong. By crushing local
businesses, this giant eliminates three decent jobs for
every two Wal-Mart jobs that it creates and a
store full of part-time, poorly paid employees hardly
builds the family wealth necessary to sustain a
community's middle-class living standard.
Indeed, Wal-Mart operates as a massive wealth extractor.
Instead of profits staying in town to be reinvested
locally, the money is hauled off to Bentonville, either
to be used as capital for conquering yet another town or
simply to be stashed in the family vaults (the Waltons,
by the way, just bought the biggest bank in Arkansas).
It's our world
Why should we accept this? Is it our country, our
communities, our economic destinies -- or theirs?
Wal-Mart's radical remaking of our labor standards and
our local economies is occurring mostly without our
knowledge or consent. Poof -- there goes another local
business. Poof -- there goes our middle-class wages. Poof
-- there goes another factory to China. No one voted for
this . . . but there it is. While corporate ideologues
might huffily assert that customers vote with their
dollars, it's an election without a campaign,
conveniently ignoring that the public's vote
might change if we knew the real cost of Wal-Mart's
cheap goods -- and if we actually had a
chance to vote.
Much to the corporation's consternation, more and more
communities are learning about this voracious powerhouse,
and there's a rising civic rebellion against it.
Tremendous victories have already been won as citizens
from Maine to Arizona, from the Puget Sound to the Gulf
of Mexico, have organized locally and even statewide to
thwart the expansionist march of the Wal-Mart juggernaut.
Wal-Mart is huge, but it can be brought to heel by an
aroused and organized citizenry willing to confront it in
their communities, the workplace, the marketplace, the
classrooms, the pulpits, the legislatures, and the voting
booths. Just as the Founders rose up against the mighty
British trading companies, so we can reassert our
people's sovereignty and our democratic principles over
the autocratic ambitions of mighty Wal-Mart.
***
More of Jim Hightower's writing can be found
in his monthly newletter, The Hightower Lowdown. For more
information, see www.jimhightower.com.
See www.walmartwatch.com for more about
Wal-Mart.
|
Home
Political Links
News
Soap Box
Cartridge Box
Jury Box
Humor
Boycott
America's Least Wanted
Biography
Contact Liz
Liz Michael for United
States Senate
|