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Blocking Walmart From Washington, D.C. Would Hurt Poor
Townhall.com ^ | July 20, 2013 | Star Parker

Posted on 07/20/2013 4:22:25 AM PDT by Kaslin

Why, when capitalism has created wealth and eradicated poverty, do left-wing politicians hate it so much? After all, it's supposed to be the left that cares about the poor.

The latest chapter in this ongoing saga of economic perversity is playing out in Washington, D.C., as the district attempts to prevent Wal-Mart Stores Inc. from opening outlets there.

The district's city council has passed a bill, awaiting signature of Mayor Vincent Gray, specifically targeted to block the company. It raises the district's minimum wage to $12.50 per hour only for stores with more than $1 billion in sales and store size of more the 75,000 square feet.

Unionized stores in the district with these characteristics are exempt. In other words, the bill protects special interests and blocks entities politicos don't want: Walmart stores.

The company promptly announced that if the mayor signs the bill into law, it will cancel plans to open three of six planned stores, each of which would create around 300 new jobs.

The chain's "low prices every day" business strategy is one of the greatest success stories in American history. Since opening its first store in 1962, the company has grown exponentially. Today, it has sales of almost a half-trillion dollars, putting it first on the Fortune 500 list for highest revenue.

According to corporate officials, the company has more 10,000 stores around the world, employs 2.2 million people and serves 200 million customers per week.

Is anyone forced to shop there? Of course not. Is anyone forced to work at a Walmart? Of course not.

This mind-boggling growth happened as a result of freedom. The chain's huge success is the result of delivering products that people freely choose to buy.

Critics claim that the company doesn't pay enough. The company responds that its pay is at or above the industry average.

But the real issue is: Why is what the company pays the business of politicians? Unlike government -- that fines you or jails you if you don't do what lawmakers want -- people work at Walmarts because they choose to do so.

The company says it gets anywhere from 10,000 to 25,000 applications for 300 to 400 job openings when it opens a store. That's more than 25 applicants per job.

It doesn't appear to me that the chain has trouble convincing people to work there.

The population of Washington, D.C., is more than 50 percent African-American. The unemployment rate is above the national average. The poverty rate is above the national average. Yet politicians would rather have no new jobs at $12.50 per hour than 900 new jobs at $10 per hour.

Some claim that big discount stores displace small businesses. This is a claim. There is no definitive study that proves this claim.

But again, even if true, it would only be true because free people choose it to be so. What business is it of politicians to tell free people where to shop? What business is it of politicians to deprive people the freedom to go to a store that sells them products at the lowest prices they can find?

Low-income earners -- those whom the left-wing politicos supposedly care about -- happen to appreciate Walmart stores' low prices.

One thing I particularly appreciate about Walmart, where I certainly shop, is the greeters. They are often disabled and other difficult-to-employ individuals. The company gives them a chance to work.

Capitalism has been a great success because it rewards creativity and hard work. Socialism has been a failure because it deprives freedom, stifles creativity, encourages envy and rewards sloth and corruption.

American success is about the miracle of freedom. When freedom is displaced by political power, everyone suffers. In this case in Washington, D.C., where politicians are blocking Walmart, those who will suffer the most are the poor.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: districtofcolumbia; walmart
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To: Venturer

Washington DC is not like other places Walmart puts their stores.The labor force in DC is unlike any other.

Those who do not have Gubmint affirmative action jobs or haven’t got an SEIU job are unemployable.”,

...agreed. I go to DC every week and it’s rare to go into a retail outlet and be treated humanely. Walmart would lose in the long run. Also, DC could incorporate other laws that would hurt Walmart.


21 posted on 07/20/2013 4:57:14 AM PDT by albie (t allowed)
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To: RKBA Democrat

The very use of the phrase “living wage” is flawed at its premise. I understand what you are trying to say, but use of the phrase imbues your argument with an element that is loaded by its nature.


22 posted on 07/20/2013 4:58:58 AM PDT by rlmorel (Silence: The New Hate Speech)
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To: RKBA Democrat

So how many stores does Kroger have in DC?


23 posted on 07/20/2013 5:04:44 AM PDT by PeteB570 ( Islam is the sea in which the Terrorist Shark swims. The deeper the sea the larger the shark.)
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To: Kaslin

It bothers me that corporations that have the resources to take these usurpations of freedom to court and challenge these petty dictators never do.


24 posted on 07/20/2013 5:05:37 AM PDT by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.)
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To: Pontiac

Recall if you will, the reason a corporation exists is to make a profit, to make money. Spending money to fight the hustlers is a total waste and produces no profit.

If they have no Walmart, let them go to Macy’s


25 posted on 07/20/2013 5:08:24 AM PDT by bert ((K.E. N.P. N.C. +12 ..... Travon... Felony assault and battery hate crime)
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To: 1rudeboy

Not a fallacy, in this instance.

Let us assume Walmart sales average $100M per store in a year.

Three stores open in DC, with total annual sales of $300M.

Do you seriously contend that the city’s population suddenly spends $300M more than the previous year for toothpaste and T-shirts? Most, effectively all, of that $300M will come from other stores’ lost business.

You have just expressed a zero-sum fallacy fallacy.

The true zero-sum fallacy is that any one person or organization in the economy gaining business must result in a loss for someone else, that there is only so much wealth to go around.

What I am pointing out is that in any given market, while a zero-sum is not applicable, the total sales are quite inelastic. If McDonalds increases its sales by $10B, it generally means most of that is from reduced sales to other fast food outlets, not that the world suddenly decided to spend $10B on lousy hamburgers.


26 posted on 07/20/2013 5:10:25 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Sherman Logan
Do you seriously contend that the city’s population suddenly spends $300M more than the previous year for toothpaste and T-shirts? Most, effectively all, of that $300M will come from other stores’ lost business.

You assume that, magically, Wal-Mart will price its products at the exact same level as the other retailers.

So, let's say you originally spent $1.50 on toothpaste, and now spend $1.00 (on perhaps a larger tube). And to be fair, let's say you now spend $1.25 on eggs versus $1.00.

Where does your 0.25 savings go? Does it simply evaporate?

27 posted on 07/20/2013 5:14:41 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: bert
Recall if you will, the reason a corporation exists is to make a profit, to make money. Spending money to fight the hustlers is a total waste and produces no profit.

In the past at least Walmart did not see it that way.

When Walmart was trying to build in a city near me the city council fought them all the way, going to court more than once. Walmart ultimately succeeded after winning in court and making some compromises.

28 posted on 07/20/2013 5:19:29 AM PDT by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.)
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To: 1rudeboy

No, that’s one of the (many) complicating factors.

Let us assume that people save 10% when buying the same goods at WalMart as opposed to somewhere else.

They might very well spend the savings at WM for additional stuff, or they might save it, or they might possibly spend it somewhere else.

Few of them, however, will take that 10% to a WM competitor and spend it there.

My sole point is that WM moving into a community creates few if any net new jobs. If this were the case, then the 2M+ in WM employees would be on top of the retail employees that would have been around had WM never existed, which is obviously just not true.

I like WM, or used to, mostly because it pisses liberals off so much, including some family members.

Unfortunately, about a year ago they seem to have made a decision to cut way back on staffing levels and wait times to checkout have gotten very unpleasant.


29 posted on 07/20/2013 5:21:26 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Sherman Logan
“No, it will not lead to 300 more jobs being available in the retail sales field in the city. Since the sales of the new store will largely come from a reduction in sales by existing stores, the “new” jobs will be offset by loss of jobs elsewhere.”

I disagree. In all the cases I've seen a walmart open in smaller towns it created so much customer traffic that dozens of new businesses spring up around them.

A small business that would never have would have opened anywhere due to ‘low traffic count’ now has a huge potential customer base to make opening a business viable.

When that customer base is spread out over a two county area nobody gets enough traffic to support a niche business.

The new jobs weren't stolen from anywhere else in the area because there was no business like it anywhere in the area!

30 posted on 07/20/2013 5:22:04 AM PDT by Beagle8U (Free Republic -- One stop shopping ....... It's the Conservative Super WalMart for news .)
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To: PeteB570

None. Apparently Kroger is smart enough not to put any in the area.


31 posted on 07/20/2013 5:22:47 AM PDT by RKBA Democrat (Food, water, guns, ammo, useful skills, cash, and precious metals.)
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To: rlmorel

Agreed, but the language does have it’s limits. I could use the term “fair” wage, but that has limits as well. “Fair” as determined by who?


32 posted on 07/20/2013 5:25:08 AM PDT by RKBA Democrat (Food, water, guns, ammo, useful skills, cash, and precious metals.)
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To: Kaslin

Democrats doing what they do best — acting stupidly.


33 posted on 07/20/2013 5:30:19 AM PDT by jhroberts
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To: Beagle8U

Yet another of the confounding factors.

But not much comfort to the many small businesses throughout that two-county area put out of business by WM.

The claim in the article is not that WM creates additional traffic allowing niche businesses to thrive, which is often true, but that the WM store itself creates 300 new (presumably net) jobs.

Someone has probably done a national analysis of whether WM has been good or bad for the economy as a whole, and its probably good. Mostly because the lower prices give people savings they can spend somewhere else, in the process creating new businesses and industries.

But I also suspect total retail jobs are fewer in number than they would have been without WM and its innovations, which other retailers have been forced to imitate.

WM is more efficient, which is to say productive, which is to say it gets more done with less. Part of the “less” is number of jobs for a given volume of retail sales.


34 posted on 07/20/2013 5:32:27 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Berosus; bigheadfred; Bockscar; ColdOne; Convert from ECUSA; ...

Thanks Kaslin.
Why, when capitalism has created wealth and eradicated poverty, do left-wing politicians hate it so much? After all, it's supposed to be the left that cares about the poor.
Now wait just a minute -- how is the left supposed to foster dependence if they allow poor people to have jobs and cheap places to shop? Meanwhile, that lovely taxpayer-funded multi-state commuter train system will have to continue to carry to and from Walmart outside of DC.


35 posted on 07/20/2013 5:36:43 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (McCain or Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
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To: Kaslin

I remember years ago when some Wal-Marts had meat departments. Where they actually had butchers cutting meat.

Well, guess what, those butchers tried to unionize. What did Wal-Mart do?

They closed ALL of their meat departments and told the unions to F**K OFF!

If only Wal-Mart had the balls to stop withholding and tell the IRS to stick it up their asses. Now THAT would be a dagger through the heart.


36 posted on 07/20/2013 5:40:05 AM PDT by unixfox
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Comment #37 Removed by Moderator

To: RKBA Democrat
Kroger has it's place in the retail market but it's not nearly as available to the public as Walmart.


38 posted on 07/20/2013 5:48:50 AM PDT by deport
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To: Sherman Logan
“The claim in the article is not that WM creates additional traffic allowing niche businesses to thrive, which is often true, but that the WM store itself creates 300 new (presumably net) jobs.”

I guess you are stuck on the idea that there are only a fixed amount of jobs in the world.

39 posted on 07/20/2013 5:53:58 AM PDT by Beagle8U (Free Republic -- One stop shopping ....... It's the Conservative Super WalMart for news .)
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To: deport; RKBA Democrat

shucks.... the image didn’t display in total. Here’s the link to it:

Click view document at the link and it’s the 2nd page.

http://thomson.mobular.net/thomson/7/3304/4785/


40 posted on 07/20/2013 5:55:59 AM PDT by deport
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