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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (7930)11/16/2003 4:10:44 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
The Wal-Martization of America

The New York Times
Editorial


November 15, 2003


The 70,000 grocery workers on strike in Southern California are
the front line in a battle to prevent middle-class service jobs from turning into
poverty-level ones.
The supermarkets say they are forced
to lower their labor costs to compete with Wal-Mart, a nonunion, low-wage employer
aggressively moving into the grocery business. Everyone should be
concerned about this fight. It is, at bottom, about the ability of retail workers to
earn wages that keep their families out of poverty.

Grocery stores in Southern California are bracing for the arrival,
in February, of the first of 40 Wal-Mart grocery supercenters. Wal-Mart's prices
are about 14 percent lower than other groceries' because the company
is aggressive about squeezing costs, including labor costs. Its workers earn a
third less than unionized grocery workers, and pay for much
of their health insurance. Wal-Mart uses hardball tactics to ward off unions. Since
1995, the government has issued at least 60 complaints alleging
illegal anti-union activities.

Southern California's supermarket chains have reacted by demanding
a two-year freeze on current workers' salaries and lower pay for newly hired
workers, and they want employees to pay more for health insurance.
The union counters that if the supermarkets match Wal-Mart, their workers
will be pushed out of the middle class. Those workers are already
only a step - or a second family income - from poverty, with wages of roughly
$18,000 a year. Wal-Mart sales clerks make about $14,000 a year,
below the $15,060 poverty line for a family of three.


Wal-Mart may also be driving down costs by using undocumented
immigrants
. Last month, federal agents raided Wal-Marts in 21 states. Wal-Mart
is facing a grand jury investigation, and a civil racketeering class-action
filed by cleaners who say they were underpaid when working for
contractors hired by Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart insists that it was unaware
of its contractors' practices. But aware or not, it may have helped to deprive
legally employable janitors of jobs and adequate pay.

This Wal-Martization of the work force, to which other low-cost,
low-pay stores also contribute, threatens to push many Americans
into poverty. The first step in countering it is to enforce the law.
The government must act more vigorously, and more quickly,
when Wal-Mart uses illegal tactics to
block union organizing. And Wal-Mart must be made
to pay if it exploits undocumented workers.

Unions understand that the quickest way to win this
war is to organize Wal-Mart workers. And Wal-Mart's
competitors have to strive for Wal-Mart's
efficiency without making workers bear the brunt.
Consumers can also play a part. Wal-Mart likes to wrap
itself in American values. It should be
reminded that one of those is paying workers
enough to give their families a decent life.


Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company
nytimes.com