Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal |
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Wal-Mart A Pharoah Who Knew Not Joseph |
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Beryl P. Wajsman | 12 February 2005 |
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“And there arose a King over Egypt who knew not Joseph.” ~ Exodus
Sam Walton and the businesses he created have been hailed as dynamic and revolutionary corporate models that established new paradigms for business to follow. In fact, the Wal-Mart formula is as old as the Pharaohs and as jaded as the worst excesses of the robber barons of the Gilded Age. Exploited colonies of slave labor producing profits for masters exerting powers of extortion that would put the Borgias to shame. But like all evils of the past, these citadels of ill-gained lucre will be stormed, this time with no monuments left in their wake as mute testament to overbearing avarice and greed.
The closure by Wal-Mart of its Jonquière store in the midst of negotiations for a collective agreement is simply the latest in a long history of cynical and destructive machinations that this colossus has imposed on suppliers and workers alike.
The policies of this company, standing astride the corporate world more as dictating nation-state with 1.4 million employees than as competitive adversary, have single-handedly been responsible for more North American jobs lost to
Serving 138 million customers a week in 5500 stores, it’s revenues exceed those of Exxon, General Motors and General Electric. As the world’s largest retailer, it is bigger than Target, Sears, Kmart, J.C.Penney and Safeway combined. Edward Fox, head of Southern Methodist University's Center for Retailing states that "Wal-Mart is so big and so furtively powerful as to have become an entirely different order of corporate being.”
Yet for this behemoth, law and legislation, rule and regulation, that seek to support a minimum level playing field for workers and vendors are mere annoyances meant to be avoided, manipulated and suborned. *****
Michael Fraser, the United Food and Commercial Worker's Canadian director, says of the Jonquière closure that is "…clearly a violation of workers' right to unionize…" and an unfair labour practices charge will be filed with the Quebec Labour Relations Board. Yet Wal-Mart’s well-known anti-union stance is only part of the picture of its arrogance. The company expanded into
Because of its power to squeeze profit-killing concessions, Wal-Mart’s treatment of suppliers can be just as brutal. Low prices come with a high cost. It’s relentless pressure on vendors to lower prices or lose it’s business has led some into bankruptcy and others to transfer jobs overseas.
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-- grew steadily until 2000. But in the past three years it has shrunk from 17 factories to 7, and from 2,600 employees to 1,200 in the face of Chinese produced clothing sold so cheaply to Wal-Mart that they could not compete even if they paid their workers nothing.
When Nabisco planned 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 and then just cut the price to Wal-Mart instead. When Nabisco objected, Wal-Mart threatened to stop buying from them.
Another supplier, Master Lock of
How is it that even large companies can’t fight Wal-Mart? Paul Krugman, the Princeton University economist writes that "Wal-Mart is so big and so centralized that it can all at once hook Chinese and other suppliers into its digital system and produce a huge switch to overseas sourcing almost immediately.”
We have been through this before. The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., the grocery-store chain, stood astride the *****
To those who would argue that Wal-Mart has created wealth; and has brought employment to the poor of the Third World; and compels no one to work for them; and that in any case many of the lost jobs have been replaced in our own economy by self-regulating market mechanisms we would ask them to examine the facts. Wal-Mart ‘s destruction of so many small and medium-sized manufacturers and retailers far exceeds any stock market funny-money “wealth” it created. They hurt real people, doing real jobs, leading real lives.
Work opportunities have everything to do with options and options are affected by market dominance. Wal-Mart, in many towns, has shut down the competition through ruthless practices. We have not even begun to put a dent into the crisis of job loss due to outsourcing and
Since the Chinese offer to buy Noranda and Falconbridge 4,000 miners have died in infrastructure accidents on 4 sites administered by China Minmetals . Since the beginning of December Wal-Mart doesn’t create low prices through better productivity, marketing, innovation or distribution. They create it the way the mobs in ***** Louis Bolduc and the leadership of the UFCW in
Cheap prices are all well and good but not at any cost. No corporation, and no complicit government, has a right to inflict a “race to the bottom” on a society. You can't buy anything at any price if you are unemployed. We are shopping ourselves out of jobs and straight into unemployment lines. We are ignoring the difference between the price of something and it’s real cost. We are buying into an unending focus on cheapness without understanding the consequences. We want clean air, clear water, superior education, good living conditions, the best health care in the world--yet we aren't protecting the manufacturers and workers paying the tax dollars that make these conditions possible.
We can do better. And the proof comes from our own backyard.
When Quebec Labor Minister Michel Després says the government has no means to act, that is untrue and unacceptable. Wal-Mart’s closure came in the midst of negotiations on the collective agreement. The government can order a re-opening by Order-in-Council until the end of negotiations. That is the least it should do under its responsibility to enforce the Labour Code of Québec. There are those today who think worker exploitation is a thing of the past. That globalized markets are the panacea to everyth We remain deaf to the growing evidence that globalization inhibits prosperity as often as it enhances it, and imposes poverty as often as it relieves it. Let us remember all the Josephs of history and let the Wal-Mart Pharaohs know of the promise to each human being that they have a call on the bounty of society’s wealth to which their labor has so much contributed. -30- |