Wal-Mart Nation:
The Race To The Bottom
More
stories: Organizing
Wal-Mart l Bargain
Basement Wages
By Floyd J. McKay
Reprinted by permission of
the author. Floyd J. McKay, a journalism professor at
Western Washington University, is a regular contributor
to the Seattle Times editorial pages.
Los
Angeles is not my kind of town. But the Angelinos are
about to take a stand that ought to be applauded across
the country.
That stand is to say "no" to a Wal-Mart "supercenter" that
the retailing giant hopes to open in the city.
These superstores are not your father's
Wal-Mart; they are monstrous, sprawling over some 25
acres and employing up to 600 workers. Their lure, of
course, is lower prices.
Wal-Mart, it seems to me, epitomizes the
race to the bottom that has the United States by the
throat as the 21st century opens.
Why do people shop at these behemoths,
when they know full well that they are driving out of
existence small businesses owned and operated by their
neighbors, employing other neighbors?
They shop because of price, and they are
forced to do so by the declining standard of living we
have offered working people for more than a generation.
People who work for minimum wage, with little or no benefits,
who cannot afford to fix their car or their kids' teeth
have no choice but to search out the lowest price.
Wal-Mart buys offshore, without apology
and for the cheapest possible prices, from companies
paying the lowest-possible wages.
As jobs in America are lost to foreign
sweatshops to feed the Wal-Mart engine, American workers
are forced to accept jobs at lower pay, with bad working
conditions. They are funneled to Wal-Mart's promise of
cheap goods, in effect patronizing the very companies
that caused their economic misery.
This is a cruel travesty on working people
in this country.
Wal-Mart is currently being sued in some
40 cases charging various abuses of labor laws, and last
fall it was reported the company extensively employs
illegal aliens as janitors. Wal-Mart has successfully
opposed unionization and frequently pays well below competing
stores.
All of these practices - alleged abuses
of labor laws, hiring illegals, and the low rate of pay
and benefits at Wal-Mart - serve to depress the labor
market in communities in which the giant is located.
That is a major factor in Los Angeles' opposition to
the supercenter.
We live in a nation in which the real-dollar
income of an average family has declined for years, while
corporate profits and executive pay have skyrocketed.
The gap between rich and poor has widened
at an alarming rate in the past 20 years. In 44 states,
the gap has increased not only between rich and poor,
but between rich and middle-class families. None of the
six exceptions is a Northwest state. Oregon has one of
the worst gaps, Washington is about average.
In some states, the inequity is staggering.
In three of the nation's largest states - California,
New York and Ohio - families in the lowest 20 percent
bracket actually lost real income from 1978 to 2000.
In 1999 dollars, the loss was between 5 and 6 percent.
In those same states, the real income gain for the top
20 percent of families ranged from 37 to 54 percent.
Nationwide, from 1978 to 2000, the lowest
20 percent of families gained only $972 annually, or
7.1 percent; the top 5 percent gained $87,779, or 58.4
percent.
These findings, by the nonpartisan Center
on Budget and Policy Priorities ( www.cbpp.org ),
were before the Bush tax cuts and the current recession,
both of which will further widen the gap.
You can't blame Sam Walton for this disparity,
but operations like Wal-Mart feed off the impoverishment
of America.
Sadly, there are byproducts in quality
of life, often unseen until it is too late.
The greatest is the destruction of America's
small and mid-sized towns, increasingly bereft of small
businesses and dominated by big-box retailers - acres
of barren asphalt parking lots, corporate managers on
their way to the next-larger store, employees scrambling
to keep low-wage jobs.
My wife's recently deceased aunt could
no longer shop in the small Iowa town where she and her
late husband ran a feed store. The store is closed, as
are the other small businesses. The elderly woman had
to drive - or be driven - past the empty shops several
miles to Wal-Mart, the nearest place to get the basics
of life.
Wal-Mart is like a neutron bomb, sucking
life out of small towns, leaving buildings without the
essence of civic life.
Those of us fortunate to earn middle-class
incomes can make a choice, and shun Wal-Mart. The tragedy
is that for an ever-increasing segment of America, the
despicable race to the bottom has left no other choice
than to shop for cheap, regardless of the consequences.
Reprinted by permission of the author.
Floyd J. McKay, a journalism professor at Western Washington
University, is a regular contributor to the Seattle Times
editorial pages. |