Walmart’s Bottom Line
Walmart is one of the world’s largest, most successful, and most vilified corporations. It was ranked number four in the Fortune 500 from 1995 through 1998, reached number one in 2002 and stayed there until 2009, when it fell behind Exxon Mobil. It’s also the only firm in the top four of the Fortune 500 that is not an energy company.
The concentrated public-relations campaign against Walmart has been moderately successful, and the company has drawn criticism from all sides: Commentators on the left criticize the company for its alleged impact on wages and jobs; those on the right criticized its decision to join the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce and to offer “abortion pills” in 2006. Recently, Walmart announced support for mandatory health coverage by large employers, bringing more criticism. Walmart’s handling of the attacks has been less effective than the company would have liked, and its attempts to defend itself have been a distraction.
The criticisms too often rely on anecdotes or statistical comparisons that are difficult to interpret. When one considers that Walmart is the world’s largest corporation, with revenues of about $300 billion and almost two million employees, anecdotes that cast the company in a good or bad light are not particularly surprising. Similarly, a simple comparison of employment (or wages) in a city with a Walmart to a city without one is only minimally informative because such comparisons often fail to control for other explanatory characteristics. Current research suggests that the economic, political, and social case against Walmart is exaggerated. Further, Walmart’s “Every Day Low Prices” do not come at an unacceptable social cost in the form of negative spillovers not reflected in prices. Walmart is certainly imperfect, and there are reasons to view the company with a critical eye, but the usual criticisms of the company collapse under the weight of the evidence.
Does Walmart Squeeze Workers and Suppliers?
Economists Jerry Hausman and Ephraim Leibtag argue that we systematically overstate the rate of price inflation because we don’t account for Walmart’s and other big-box companies’ impact correctly. Walmart claims to save consumers $2,500 per capita per year. This is probably an overestimate, but studies I have done with Charles Courtemanche of the University of North Carolina-Greensboro do suggest that Walmart increases our options.
Critics claim that Walmart can deliver low prices because it destroys jobs, lowers labor standards, and squeezes suppliers. The data, however, do not support the first two, while the third is misleading. Retail labor market studies by University of Missouri economist Emek Basker show that Walmart modestly increases retail employment. Critics are quick to counter by questioning the quality of those jobs, correctly noting that Walmart pays less than its unionized competitors. However, this should be qualified. Union pay scales restrict the labor pool from which unionized stores can hire: If the union contract specifies minimum compensation of $12 per hour, then people whose labor cannot produce at least that much in revenue will not be hired. Since Walmart is an open shop, it has no such artificial floor for the productivity of the people it can hire. Those who would not be employable under union conditions are made better off despite the illusion of exploitation.
The company’s critics correctly point out that the last several decades have seen a large gap open between manufacturing and retail wages. But these data must be interpreted with caution because immigration and changing labor participation have altered the distribution of the workforce. People who are today earning Walmart’s “Every Day Low Wages,” as the critics call them, might not have participated in the labor force several decades ago and their wages would not have appeared in the official data.
Supposedly, Walmart drives small local mom-and-pop retailers out of business, spreading economic havoc and weakening a community’s social fabric. In a paper published in Economic Inquiry, West Virginia University economists Andrea M. Dean and Russell S. Sobel fail to detect a statistically significant effect of Walmart on self-employment, the number of small businesses, or bankruptcy among small businesses. It is true that Walmart causes some businesses to close, particularly in sectors that directly compete with the company. However, these businesses can be replaced by businesses in other sectors. In a summary of their research that appeared in the Spring 2008 Regulation magazine, Dean and Sobel offer the example of Main Street in Morgantown, West Virginia, which was decimated by Walmart but which soon recovered as clothiers and electronics stores were replaced by small businesses in other industries.
They also discuss the obvious objection that perhaps Walmart’s wake leaves a swath of low-value, low-wage businesses. They show, however, that Walmart penetration does not appear to reduce the values of small
businesses. Stacy Mitchell, author of The Big-Box Swindle, argues that Dean and Sobel’s result relies on an incorrect interpretation of Census data. For their part, Dean and Sobel say Mitchell misunderstands the data. If they are correct, the effects of Walmart’s penetration are consistent with what economists believe about technology and economic growth as well as with Joseph Schumpeter’s well-known concept of “creative destruction.” Walmart’s expansion allows people to produce more with fewer resources and less labor, which frees those resources and that labor to move into other occupations.
Walmart also allegedly uses its raw bargaining strength to extract concessions from suppliers. It is usually able to get lower prices, but it also provides something of great value in return: access to its supply chain and logistical support. While anecdotes of Walmart’s hard bargaining abound, a 2001 Journal of Retailing study by Paul N. Bloom and Vanessa G. Perry found that while dealing with Walmart can hurt financial performance for companies that do only a small share of business with the company, “large-share suppliers to Wal-Mart perform better than their large-share counterparts reporting retailers other than Wal-Mart as their primary customers.” Bloom and Perry note that Walmart offers access to broad markets and that companies taking advantage of this prosper as a result.
Sweatshops
Another common refrain is that Walmart and other large retailers obtain their goods from third-world “sweatshops.” In an important 2006 study published in the Journal of Labor Research, economists Benjamin Powell and David Skarbek showed that “sweatshop” labor paid better than the alternatives. In a June 4, 2008, article for the Library of Economics and Liberty, Powell summarizes this research and points out that criticisms of “sweatshop wages” (like those aimed at a factory in Honduras making clothes for Kathie Lee Gifford in 1996) invariably compare the wages and working conditions to American rather than Honduran working conditions—a comparison he calls “irrelevant” because of restrictions on international labor mobility. Sweatshops are a blessing, not a burden. As Powell points out, sweatshop wages more than double the average in some countries. Unfortunately, boycotts and legislation will not improve working conditions around the world. Powell summarizes the conditions that create low wages in countries like Honduras:
Wages are low in the third world because worker productivity is low (upper bound) and workers’ alternatives are lousy (lower bound). To get sustained improvements in overall compensation, policies must raise worker productivity and/or increase alternatives available to workers. Policies that try to raise compensation but fail to move these two bounds risk raising compensation above a worker’s upper bound, resulting in his losing his job and moving to a less-desirable alternative.
Unwillingness to recognize this can lead to policies that do more harm than good. Abuses undoubtedly occur, but Walmart has the resources to be able to have an effective monitoring program—not necessarily because of explicit humanitarian impulses, but because consumers are willing to pay for the guarantees and assurances that they are not buying the products of slave labor. Since consumers demand information about the conditions in which those who make these goods labor, it is in Walmart’s best interests to monitor carefully the conditions in which people produce the goods they obtain from abroad.
The thesis that Walmart’s ethical-standards monitoring is an elaborate ruse is tempting, and a ruse might pay off in the short run. However, Walmart should be disciplined by the capital market. Failure to provide consumers with what they demand—guarantees about international labor conditions, for example—at the price they are willing to pay will hurt long-run profitability and, therefore, the stock price. It is wise to read with a critical eye, but if Walmart’s managers are running a systematic campaign of misinformation, then they are failing in their responsibility to shareholders. Someone who discovered such a ruse would be in a position to profit handsomely by acquiring Walmart stock and fixing the problem.
Walmart, Communities, and the Environment
In his 2000 book, Bowling Alone, political scientist Robert Putnam documented a decline in “social capital”—which he defines as “networks and norms of reciprocity” that hold communities together—in the United States since the 1950s. Walmart has been accused of contributing to this phenomenon. In a 2006 study agricultural economists Stephan Goetz and Anil Rupasingha reported evidence that Walmart reduced several measures of social capital like census participation, voting, and a measure they themselves constructed. However, in a study published in Public Choice in early 2009, Charles Courtemanche, Jeremy Meiners, and I use Putnam’s data to show that there is no identifiable, systematic negative relationship between increased Walmart density/longevity and measures of noneconomic “quality of life” or civic participation. As Walmart penetration increases, we cannot tell that people spend systematically less time with friends or less time civically engaged.
Others have alleged that Walmart erodes American values. United States of Wal-Mart author John Dicker calls the company a “conservative cultural gatekeeper,” and right-wing critics like those who operate the Christian website www.saveWal-Mart.com took Walmart to task for joining the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce. (The company discontinued this affiliation in 2007.) Using similar data and methods to those used in our study of social capital, my coauthors and I were unable to find a systematic relationship between Walmart’s penetration and individual values. It appears that while people get their groceries at Walmart, they get their politics and their values elsewhere.
Finally, Walmart has been criticized for its alleged contributions to environmental degradation, but its cost-cutting has considerably reduced the amount of packaging manufacturers use. This was particularly important in 2008 as gas prices hit record highs. A May 29, 2008, article on CNNMoney.com used Hamburger Helper as an example: To meet Walmart’s demands, General Mills produces “denser pasta shapes” that can be put into a box that is 20 percent smaller, saving “890,000 pounds of paper and eliminat[ing] 500 trucks from the road.” Conditions create solutions: Walmart has been able to use recent increases in fuel prices to trim additional fat from the supply chain and to innovate in ways that will lead to permanent increases in productivity.
Discrimination, Health Care, and Subsidies
Finally, Walmart has been criticized for alleged systematic discrimination against women and for aggressive patterns of seeking local government subsidies. Walmart is the defendant in the largest class-action civil rights lawsuit in history—Dukes versus Wal-Mart, in which an estimated 1.6 million women allege a decades-long pattern of discrimination—but the central tenet of the case is inconsistent with Walmart’s alleged morbid obsession with profits. In spite of their incompatibility, these criticisms often appear side by side. There are conditions under which firms can maximize profits while discriminating in employment, but before we can reconcile discrimination with profit maximization we have to prove that these conditions are in place. Otherwise, the hypothesis of profit maximization works against discrimination and discrimination works against profit maximization. If an employer insisted on discriminating by refusing to hire productive women or by paying them less than they were worth, he would create profitable opportunities for competitors to scoop up members of the victim group and earn profits by paying them something closer to their market value. An employer’s ability to discriminate will be sharply limited by competitive pressure.
Walmart’s critics have also argued that the company places undue burdens on the government’s public health infrastructure. But this is a “problem” that exists because that infrastructure exists and not because of Walmart as such. One could argue more plausibly that by paying better than their employees’ next-best alternatives, Walmart actually relieves some of the pressure on the public health infrastructure. The critics also miss that Walmart’s existence provides a larger pool of resources that can be taxed to provide these benefits.
One robust criticism remains: Walmart has sometimes used the State to redistribute resources to itself and to cripple its competitors. Walmart is aggressive about seeking subsidies, such as acquiring properties through eminent domain, from governments eager to “attract new jobs” and new tax revenue, as critical groups like Good Jobs First, WalMartWatch.com, and WakeUpWalMart.com point out. These subsidies distort patterns of economic activity and sometimes can have the perverse effect of taxing one firm to subsidize a competitor. The problem is compounded further by the alleged need for more subsidies to redevelop areas blighted in Walmart’s wake. This issue provides a setting in which Walmart’s critics can play a constructive role.
In 2005 Walmart supported an increase in the minimum wage, and in July 2009 it earned a front-page mention in the Wall Street Journal for teaming up with the Service Employees International Union and the Center for American Progress to advocate mandatory employer-provided medical coverage. Walmart’s seemingly counterintuitive advocacy is a classic example of what economist Bruce Yandle terms the “Baptists and Bootleggers” phenomenon. Among the supporters of Prohibition were Baptists, many of whom felt that consuming alcohol is a sin, and bootleggers, who stood to profit handsomely if the government crippled potential legitimate competition. In the health care scenario the “Baptists” are groups that believe everyone has a fundamental right to health care. The bootleggers are large firms (like Walmart) that know that mandates will hurt their smaller competitors.
There is also reason to believe that Walmart’s business model is partially underwritten by transportation subsidies. Critics often overlap with people who criticize the American “love affair” with the automobile. The two are related. While it is true that, all else equal, Walmart has been good for consumers, it is also an unintended consequence of the massive subsidies to transportation infrastructure that created today’s urban sprawl. To the degree that Walmart is undesirable, it is a symptom of a larger pattern of interventionism rather than a cause.
Perhaps most unsettlingly, Walmart’s embrace of the proposed health care mandates and advocacy of a higher minimum wage illustrates a disturbing truth about the reality of doing business in the twenty-first century. By backing President Obama’s health care proposal, Walmart might be able to use this to fend off more damaging legislation later. In short, Walmart could be aiding and abetting what Ayn Rand called “an aristocracy of pull.” A 2006 volume of critical essays called the company “the face of twenty-first-century capitalism.” If twenty-first-century capitalism means competition by politics rather than competition by production, we will see lower economic growth as a result. This does not excuse the company’s use of the coercive power of the State for its own benefit, but Walmart is an effect rather than a cause.
The economic, political, and social case against Walmart has been tried and measured against the best available data. For the most part, it has been found wanting. We are left with a rather flimsy criticism, which is that for all its virtues (or at least its non-vices), Walmart is aesthetically unappealing. This visceral reaction to capitalist aesthetics has been called “the yuck factor,” and economist Alvin Roth has argued that we have to take “repugnance” seriously as a political constraint. However, just because I find another’s choices repugnant, I don’t have the right to supplant those choices with my own. People have argued that what happens in someone’s bedroom is none of the government’s business. By the same logic, what someone puts in his or her shopping cart is none of the government’s business. Even if Walmart causes people to make bad aesthetic choices, the civility necessary for a functioning society must take over.
Walmart’s “Every Day Low Prices” policy has been alleged to reduce labor standards, to squeeze suppliers, to decimate small retailers, and to tear the social fabric. In virtually every instance, the empirical evidence available suggests that what Charles Fishman called The Wal-Mart Effect is at best positive, at worst benign. Walmart is a retailing innovator and a force for competitors and suppliers to reckon with. As a social phenomenon, however, the alleged negative spillovers from Walmart are greatly overstated.

![Walmart fasion [for Carden] Walmart fasion [for Carden]](http://www.thefreemanonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Walmart-fasion-for-Carden-1024x682.jpg)









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Comment by Johnny on 7 January 2010:
Art,
If you can’t quit teaching, then at least quit writing. You are as out of touch on business as Al Gore is on nature.
Comment by Anon on 7 January 2010:
Johnny, this is a fair review of the current academic literature on Walmart. If you want to resort to juvenile ad hominems you might as well start by attacking the research Art sites rather than his own scholarship. Don’t be such a tool.
Comment by Anon on 7 January 2010:
cites*
Comment by Josh Weil on 7 January 2010:
Johnny,
Baseless attacks add nothing to the discussion. If you have a point to make, then by all means make it. Insulting Art and providing no information accomplishes nothing but bad feelings.
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Comment by xonoxy on 18 January 2010:
Art,
I find some of these arguments to be weak.
1) You argue that by paying a lower rate than union shops, Walmart can profitably hire people whose value as employees is less than the rate paid to a union worker. In order for this argument to stick, you would need to show that this is the case at Walmart. One could just as easily, and with just as little support, argue that employers depress the wages of low-skilled employees because they can; it serves to maximize profit. In this case, the critiques against Walmart are valid.
2) You write: “People who are today earning Walmart’s “Every Day Low Wages,” as the critics call them, might not have participated in the labor force several decades ago and their wages would not have appeared in the official data.” This is pure supposition that does not serve to combat criticism. You cannot, as it were, prove by example.
3) When you write, “…while dealing with Walmart can hurt financial performance for companies that do only a small share of business with the company, ‘large-share suppliers to Wal-Mart perform better than their large-share counterparts reporting retailers other than Wal-Mart as their primary customers’” it seems to me that you are capitulating to the critics who fret about Walmart’s collosal power. I read this as saying that mid-size suppliers, having already been forced to reshape their practices to produce for Walmart, can be crushed when the next round of concessions are forced on them.
4) “It is wise to read with a critical eye, but if Walmart’s managers are running a systematic campaign of misinformation, then they are failing in their responsibility to shareholders. Someone who discovered such a ruse would be in a position to profit handsomely by acquiring Walmart stock and fixing the problem.”
This is absurd. I have no opinion on Walmart and third-world sweat shops, but the suggestion that someone could buy Walmart stock and effect real change is laughable. Shareholders are systematically disenfranchised; there is no mechanism for an activist investor, right or wrong, to change corporate policy. Especially not in such a large organization.
5) You argue that by reducing packaging, Walmart has done environmental good. However, you haven’t presented any of the criticisms that Walmart contributes to environmental degradation, even as a straw man. I can’t conclude that you are addressing these criticisms from the information in your essay.
6) When writing about alleged discrimination, you make an efficiency argument that discrimination works against profit maximization. This presupposes that variations in the efficiency of entry-level workers has a measurable effect on profit that additionally outweights the utility people derive from discrimination. Besides, if I were inclined to discriminate against women, with unemployment at 10% I could probably find enough qualified men to fill open positions; I would still be discriminating against women. Finally, those who may be discriminating may themselves be low-paid managers on a fixed career track with little incentive to maximize profits. It’s not like they are paid a stock bonus like the CEO.
… I could continue. You seem very confident that Walmart is a force for good. What first brought you to this conclusion? It is interesting to me that you have not painted a black-and-white picture of the company, but have rather defended it against a broad array of criticisms. Do you have any criticism of them at all?
Comment by baal on 18 January 2010:
MAOMART stores are dirty and smelly. The nasty miserable cheapo customers that stalk the isles are morons. Go to TARGET, you get much better quality merchandise for the same price.
God, I love Capitalism…..
Comment by Pete on 21 January 2010:
Mr. Carden:
You write: “Union pay scales restrict the labor pool from which unionized stores can hire: If the union contract specifies minimum compensation of $12 per hour, then people whose labor cannot produce at least that much in revenue will not be hired. Since Walmart is an open shop, it has no such artificial floor for the productivity of the people it can hire.”
I would remind you that Walmart (and every other employer) suffers with an artificial wage floor, albeit lower than union wages: the minimum wage established by legal proclamation.
Comment by James Madison Fan on 21 January 2010:
I was looking forward to an objective examination of Wal-Mart’s business model, unfortunately that didn’t happen.
Mr. Carden starts off paragraph two with discussing a “concentrated public relations campaign against Wal-Mart.” Mr. Carden laments the use of anecdotes and overly complex statistical models by supposed conspirators but can’t resist the temptation of using hyperbole for his own ends. I have yet to see commercials designed by Von’s, Ralph’s, Kroger, etc. that show happy checkers in their stores earning $18.00 an hour plus benefits then showing Wal-Mart employees averaging $10.00 an hour supplementing their income with food stamps and welfare, living in a slum, and using ER’s as their primary source of health care.
The problem is Wal-Mart is trying to fight one of the most powerful aspects of advertising: Word of Mouth. You can see a thousand commercials promising a product is good but it only takes one or two friends telling you not to waste your money to derail an entire advertising campaign. In this aspect Mr. Carden’s is correct when he says that most of the damage done to Wal-Mart’s reputation is anecdotal. The volume of stories from people that have lost their jobs and businesses because of Wal-Mart or have been maltreated is overwhelming their best efforts to (literally) paint a happy face on their dysfunctional corporate ethics.
He opens paragraph three rallying against the use of “anecdotes and statistical comparisons that are difficult to interpret” but two sentences later he offers “A simple comparison of employment (wages)” is also inadequate. If the complex models are overly complex and the simple models are overly simplistic what model would he suggest we use? Apparently his model alone has both the complexity required to analyze the situation correctly while not being so intricate as to overwhelm the analyst.
Not surprisingly Wal-Mart indicates they “save consumers $2,500 per capita per year.” Regardless of if this is exaggerated or not the equation Wal-Mart uses leaves out the cost of taxpayers supplementing Wal-Mart’s payroll and health care. Mr. Carden dismiss this en passant by offering these programs should not exist in the first place. So all we have to do to solve this issue is close our eyes, click our heals together three times and say, “These programs should not exist.” If only it were that easy.
I deal with what is, not what isn’t. These programs exist and they are not going away any time soon. By underpaying and failing to insure their employees and crushing unions that would force these issues Wal-Mart is using safety net programs to suck money out of the consumer’s wallet – including those that do not shop at their stores. Every dollar Wal-Mart saves by underpaying employees represents a tax dollar that is diverted from infrastructure. Every dollar Wal-Mart saves by not insuring their employees represents lost revenues for hospitals when these employees end up in the ER and can’t pay. Since welfare for the poor is anathema to Mr. Carden I fail to understand how he can support corporate welfare for a company that earned $300 billion.
One of the largest, if not the largest, expenses of any business is payroll. Wal-Mart has found a way to use tax dollars to supplement this so the government is paying Wal-Mart to expand into areas and bankrupt unionized stores. Mr. Carden addresses this by offering that people that could not be employed in a unionized store may now be employed in a non-unionized store but does not address what happens to those that were previously employed in the unionized store.
Even if we assume that employment pre-Wal-Mart versus post-Wal-Mart is 1 to 1 the rate of pay is around half the wage previously earned. Wal-Mart may well employ people that could not be previously employed at such a low wage but this does not address the jobs that are lost at the higher wage. So Wal-Mart creates 100 jobs at $10 an hour but destroys 100 jobs that previously paid $18.00 an hour so there is a net loss of $8.00 an hour per employee and a loss of an additional $18.00 per hour per position if the replacement ratio is less than 1 to 1.
In addition to this Wal-Mart is bringing in product from sweatshops around the globe. Mr. Carden defends this by offering these employees are often paid multiples of the prevailing wage in those countries without noting that twice nothing is still nothing.
The average worker in Honduras might earn $5.00 a day but these other shops pay $10.00 a day and call it philanthropy. Meanwhile they were paying a US worker $10.00 an hour for that product so it costs 80% less. The result of this is the US company shuts down, the workers in Honduras are still living in squalor but now they can afford two bunches of bananas instead of one, and these Wal-Mart allied companies pocket the extra $70.00. This also has a domino effect as US companies compete with a foreign company that has a fraction of the overhead.
The concept that Wal-Mart is being unjustly persecuted by some unknown cabal without just cause is entirely without merit. There are some legitimate concerns both pro and con; it would be nice to read something by someone that takes both sides of the debate seriously.
Comment by David H Dennis on 23 January 2011:
It’s interesting to note that I have yet to see a large unionized grocery chain vanish. Ralph’s, in California, is still in business. Publix, in Florida, is still in business. Giant Eagle, in Pennsylvania, is still in business.
I haven’t lived in California for about ten years but oddly enough it appears that the same number of Ralphs markets exist in the city I used to live in than I remember ten years ago. When I lived in Pittsburgh, I never saw a single Giant Eagle close. Where I live now, in Palm Beach County, Florida, there are Publix markets on almost every street corner.
All of these stores are near Walmarts and face serious competition from Walmart. But none of this appears to have seriously damaged or killed the mainstream, unionized groceries. They are still here.
What we can say about Walmart is that it can save people a lot of money. I liked what Mark Steyn pointed out about this: Instead of seeing a little girl who can’t afford a coat as a political pawn, as John Edwards did in his speeches, we can direct her to Walmart, where you can find something warm for $8-odd. This is a tremendous boon to many people, and I think the essay above severely understates the advantages to the public in having a place where everything’s consistently cheap.
When my income goes up, I shop at Publix and Whole Foods and Joseph’s (an excellent specialty market). When it goes down, more of my dollars go to Walmart. I don’t love Walmart, it’s not a fun place to visit like Joseph’s or Whole Foods, but it’s great to have a choice, and I think it’s safe to say all those choices are here to stay.
So what’s the issue, really?
D
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