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It Is Going to Be a Wal-Mart Christmas.

Wal-Mart is the only store where hard-squeezed consumers can afford anything, and so it keeps posting big profits amid the retail bloodbath.


WASHINGTON -- Merry Wal-Mart, America.

It is going to be a Wal-Mart Christmas. This is what all the facts and figures tell us, and what Wall Street analysts tell us after they've pored over the monthly retail sales reports, each bleaker than the last. In their odd half-emptiness, this is what the shopping-center parking lots tell us, too.

It is definitely not going to be a General Motors Christmas.

This doesn't depend on whether Congress and the Bush administration manage to rush cash into the coffers of GM and other Detroit automakers. It is not going to be a General Motors Christmas because we long ago stopped being a General Motors country.

What were we like then?

Well, we were a country in which, if you were working class, you were not feeling betrayed and you didn't necessarily feel inferior to, say, the people who sold stock on Wall Street. They could only sell stock if you made a product that backed up that stock. This was nothing like those deals in which nobody can tell what's exchanged except paper and false promises.

Your employer recognized your skills and experience with a healthy, middle-class paycheck. You knew your family's health was protected by good insurance, that your spouse could rely on a decent pension after you were gone and that your children might win a company scholarship to attend college -- or get a job at the plant, an option in which there was no shame.

Wages for production workers in the Big Three automakers averaged $67,480 in 2007, according to the Center for Automotive Research. The companies provide health insurance, directly or indirectly, for 2 million employees, dependents, retirees and employees of some suppliers.

Some people look at that number -- $67,480 -- and see an outrageous union giveaway, the supposedly definitive reason that taxpayers should not bail out Detroit. These same people do not necessarily complain about the bad business decisions auto executives made. Nor do they seem to link the current credit crisis -- inextricably connected to the unspeakable greed among the top guns of Wall Street -- as a direct cause of the industry's current woes. It is.

But just until now, the reasoning went, these executives took risks and that's what makes America work!

Now America is not working very well and so we are going to have a Wal-Mart Christmas.

The giant discounter is the only store where hard-squeezed consumers can afford to buy anything, and so it has kept posting sales gains amid the retail bloodbath. "This is the kind of environment that Sam Walton built this company for," Wal-Mart chief executive H. Lee Scott Jr. told analysts recently.

He should know. Because Wal-Mart has done so much to create this environment.

Long before the stock market meltdown, the foreclosure crisis, the credit crunch and everything else in the cascade of bad economic news that swamps us, there was the income crisis. And the health insurance crisis. And the crisis in whether employers follow the labor laws, or routinely break them.

Here is what Wal-Mart's 2008 annual report says: The company is a defendant in "numerous cases" for alleged violations of wage and hour laws. Generally, they involve employees who say they were forced to work "off the clock," who were denied meal and rest breaks, or who claim the company simply found other ways not to pay them for hours they'd worked.

Wal-Mart also is ensnared in the largest gender-discrimination lawsuit ever, with women claiming they were paid less and denied promotions and transfers that men received. It faces environmental charges from federal and state prosecutors who say Wal-Mart has flouted hazardous waste disposal and other laws.

In June, the National Labor Relations Board found that Wal-Mart illegally fired an employee for union organizing, and determined that the company had illegally threatened employees with a loss of merit pay during a unionization drive.

The company that is now the biggest private-sector employer says the average hourly wage of its workers is $10.86. Wal-Mart has said it considers a 34-hour week as full time, though it declined to respond to my questions about this and other employment issues. Assuming the full-time week is 34 hours, a full-time Wal-Mart "associate" averages $19,200 a year. That's about $2,000 below the 2008 federal poverty level for a family of four.

So, it is going to be a Wal-Mart Christmas. Because we have become a Wal-Mart country, and we are all laid low.

(c) 2008, Washington Post Writers Group

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"The company that is now the biggest private-sector employer says the average hourly wage of its workers is $10.86. Wal-Mart has said it considers a 34-hour week as full time, though it declined to respond to my questions about this and other employment issues. Assuming the full-time week is 34 hours, a full-time Wal-Mart "associate" averages $19,200 a year. That's about $2,000 below the 2008 federal poverty level for a family of four."

Most families of 4 have two people earning income. So two people earning that amount would be over $38,000. That still is nothing, but it shows one of the many flaws in your so-called unbiased article.

Also, last time I checked Walmart was pretty crowded and with the unemployment rate climbing, those working there are probably glad they picked Walmart for a job. Something is better than nothing.
quote:
Originally posted by LMM:
In my house it will be split between Walmart and the Dollar Tree. Christmas does not have to be expensive to be a memory!


I had planned my Christmas shopping spree for Saks Fifth Avenue and Nieman Marcus, but I called them and they said that the Palin family had stripped them of virtually all their inventory. Guess I'll trot over to Goody's!
In principle, I am vehemently opposed to Wal*Mart's practices, and for YEARS avoided shopping at Wal*Mart like the plague.

In this economy, my principles don't feed the kitties or me. I can get pretty much the same formula of cat food that I've been buying for years at Wal*Mart for five dollars less than the Purina I was buying elsewhere - and there's a pound more in the bag. I can get powdered energy drink mixes, a box of 10, for $1.97. I can't buy ONE canned energy drink for that. I'm wearing a jacket that cost $25 from Wal*Mart, and my boss got mad at me when I told her how much it cost. She has the same exact jacket, albeit with a "fancy label name" that she bought for $129.

I wish I could afford to have principles, but when it comes to basic necessities, if Wal*Mart has the items at a price I can afford, and the other retailers price goods out of my meager means, my principles can kiss my hairy yellow butt. My kitties gotta eat, and this jacket sure is coming in handy during this cold snap.
ha, I beat walmart this year....I bought throughout the year and had ALL my Christmas shopping done by mid-August. I bought things when I found them on sale and had someone on my list that would like it. The hard thing is to remember where you hid all the items.

All that is left to buy now is the most important purchases of the holidays...FOOD and lots of it...This is when you can really enjoy Christmas.

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