China upbeat on growth, India lags behind

nimo_cn

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I agree the word 'majority' requires qualification.

Majority as I mentioned meant the Chinese wannabes who want to be acceptable to the world society, more so, to the US and the West, and not the real Chinese who are the peasants and workers.

The peasants and workers have no time to waste because they are busy living their lives without any false dream generated by stash of money earned through legal and illegal means.
Oh, really? You should clarify it in the first place as well know "the majority of Chinese wannabes" is not "the majority of Chinese".

Having English names is a fashion among those who are working in multi-national companies, or studying, travelling overseas, When one of my roomate was working as an intern in Alctel-Lucent, having an English name is a must, because his American co-workers have difficulties in pronouncing Chinese names.
 

Ray

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Oh, really? You should clarify it in the first place as well know "the majority of Chinese wannabes" is not "the majority of Chinese".
That has been clarified, though in English!

Having English names is a fashion among those who are working in multi-national companies, or studying, travelling overseas, When one of my roomate was working as an intern in Alctel-Lucent, having an English name is a must, because his American co-workers have difficulties in pronouncing Chinese names.
No end of excuses to obfuscate the reality.

All foreign names are difficult to pronounce in any country. But that does not mean that one has to forsake his heritage and name to sell one's soul for money that a profession may guarantee in a foreign land or a foreign company.
 

Rage

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The Jury is still out.

It may have become a Bill, but then the proof of the pudding is in the eating.

Walmart is banned in some US cities and so let us watch and see how it operates here.

To be frank, I like the old chips which we got in cinema halls in the yesteryears than the nitrogen charged and preserved Lay.

US is encouraging Farmers Markets over branded products!
Just a clarification, Walmart has been banned in some US cities: New York and San Diego in particular. because the city councils did not see it taxationally fit to allow operations of 'big box' retail stores (90,000 sq.ft. plus) that used more than 10% of space to sell groceries and other merchandise, that under U.S. law, is not subject to sales tax.

Encouraging farmers' markets is an attempt to balance US consumption of processed foods and packaged goods, which have come to be recognised as inflating healthcare costs, with organically sourced produce. Such is not the case in India.

The FDI-retail amendment will certainly spur growth, there is no doubt about it. It is a crucial stage in the industrialisation process, without which India will not transform into the 'big', globally integrated economy we want it to be. With the inclusion of riders such as 30% local sourcing, labour laws to support 24-hour business, competition laws to prevent reckless proliferation of malls, 'back end' mandatory investment and a uniform countrywide licensing regime to accelerate retail growth [which are soon to follow] it is hoped that these amendments will be more equitable as well. Organized retail is now growing at 45-50% in this country, with unorganised retail growing at 10%, even on the back of a sector that has no majority (foreign) investors. It is the way forward.
 

amoy

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That has been clarified, though in English!



No end of excuses to obfuscate the reality.

All foreign names are difficult to pronounce in any country. But that does not mean that one has to forsake his heritage and name to sell one's soul for money that a profession may guarantee in a foreign land or a foreign company.
I met a few D'Silva and Joseph from India.

One of news anchors in China's CCTV is Indian whose surname is Jacob.

And your defense minister is Anthony (or Antony?). And a Fernandez, what's his job? :rofl:
 

Ray

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Walmart's Global Track Record and the Implications for FDI in Multi-Brand Retail in India

Executive Summary

We believe that without adequate safeguards put in place, FDI in multi-brand retail will likely lead to widespread displacement and poor treatment of Indian
workers in retail, logistics, agriculture and manufacturing.

The report discusses the potential effects of globalised modern retail, on four groups of stakeholders:

modern retail workers, small retailers (kiranas and hawkers), supply chain intermediaries (e.g. wholesalers), and producers.

This report examines the track record of Walmart, the largest retailer in the world, with global revenue of $421 billion USD in 2010, 3.5 times the revenue of the next-largest competitor1.

As set forth in more detail within the report, Walmart has a record of violating laws protecting workers' rights and aggressive anti-union conduct in the United
States and elsewhere. For example, Human Rights Watch in a 2007 report noted that Walmart's "relentless anti-union drumbeat creates a climate of
fear at its US stores." And as a result, "Many workers are convinced they will suffer dire consequences if they form a union."2

In the United States studies show that Walmart has a negative impact on both retail worker wages and total retail employment. University of California researchers found that "Walmart workers earn an estimated 12.4% less than retail workers as a whole."3 And other researchers estimated that "Each Walmart worker takes the place of 1.4 retail workers."4

In a number of countries, the presence of a Walmart store has had a devastating impact on small businesses in the surrounding areas. Studies have also
found that the expansion of hypermarkets like Walmart has led to the mass closure of small businesses in the United States and other countries. Researchers from
the United States Census Bureau found that "the entry of and growth of [hypermarkets] has a substantial negative impact on employment growth and survival of
single unit and smaller chain stores."5

Supply chain intermediaries, like wholesalers and other middlemen, are also negatively impacted by Walmart. The company's global reach allows it to
source goods directly thereby circumvent existing wholesalers and distributors. During the recent Competition Tribunal hearings in South Africa regarding
Walmart's acquisition of Massmart, the company cited its ability to "disintermediate" (e.g. eliminate middle men) as an important way to cut costs.6
Workers in the company's supply chain do not fare much better. In the long term, Walmart pushes prices paid to farmers and manufacturers down rather than
raising them, and producers unable to accept such concessions simply go out of business. The company is so large that it has the power to dictate the terms of
suppliers' contracts, including turnaround time, quality, quantity and price. In a review of Walmart's Mexican operations one clothing manufacturer noted that
"Walmart has driven many suppliers out of business.

Walmart maintains its profit margin"¦ They never reduce their margin."7 Therefore, as regards the supply of products for sale in the Walmart stores, the potential
effects of FDI in retail include an increase in imports,

price pressure on Indian producers, particularly SMEs, through giant retailer monopsonies, and the depression of pay and conditions for manufacturing workers
and farmers.

UNI recognizes that the conditions and experiences in each country vary, and acknowledges that India needs to craft its own policies. Yet we believe that our experiences around the world should inform the formulation of those policies and would therefore suggest that India maintain its ban on FDI in multi-brand retail.
However, in the likely event the government proceeds to allow FDI in multi-brand retail this paper offers a number of recommendations to mitigate its impacts.
Among these, UNI asks that the government take steps to guarantee that retail workers will have an opportunity to be represented by a union and that a National
Wage Board is established. We also urge that the government maintain and strengthen the current conditions under consideration, including the limitation
on the pace and scale of the access to the Indian market.

local sourcing and by the addition of an enforcement mechanism in place of self-monitoring.

*********************

There is more of the Executive Summary and the whole report at: http://www.uniglobalunion.org/Apps/UNIPub.nsf/vwLkpById/870AFFCDCFFA1EE7C12579C00054892D/$FILE/FDI_REPORT.PDF
 

Rage

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@Ray,

Most reports are unanimous in their predication that, without adequate safeguards the introduction of super-stores is likely to have devastating effects on workers' unions and unorganized/micro retail. But that is exactly the premise, which is why these safeguard are being introduced. Crucially, the states have a big say in the introduction of these regulations. And our vote bank politics will ensure that these exist.

I wouldn't expect Uniglobalunion to have an unbiased opinion on the formation of labour unions. Given that, I daresay a modicum of de-unionization is what India needs.

A good example to compare ourselves with is China. And there, despite the problems with food labelling and safety, labor, political infighting and arbitrary imposition of penalties, Walmart and other big stores have generally accentuated the retail environment, not depressed it.
 
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Ray

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I met a few D'Silva and Joseph from India.

One of news anchors in China's CCTV is Indian whose surname is Jacob.

And your defense minister is Anthony (or Antony?). And a Fernandez, what's his job? :rofl:
That is the surname that their ancestors were given when they were converted by the missionaries.

They are what is called 'Rice Christians'.

Our Defence Minister's name is Arackaparambil Kurien Antony .

Now, try pronouncing Arackaparambil!

He has not changed that, has he?

What about our President Kocheril Raman Narayanan? He is a Christian and he has not changed his name.

Amartya Sen, the Nobel Prize winner who lives in the UK and US, has not changed his name even though he teaches in prestigious foreign universities.

And the list goes on and on.

It was said by the Chinese poster that the Chinese change names to English one when they work in MNCs.

But in the case of Indians, it maybe noted that the CCTV anchor has not changed his name Jacob to Hu Hung or Jumping Jacob or something like that since it maybe difficult to pronounce his first name in a Chinese TV channel.

Dilip Joseph, an American doctor kidnapped by the Taliban, was rescued today by Afghan and coalition forces in eastern Afghanistan, officials said.
Doctor freed from Taliban - Yahoo! News India
Note that the doctor is an American of Indian origin. His name is Dilip and he maintains that name even though he is an American. Jacob is because his ancestors were converted by the missionaries and they forced English names to differentiate them from the rest of the Indians.

There are many Indians who are citizens or work in the US, UK and Europe, you are not Christians, and they retain their names no matter how difficult it is for the host country natives find them.

That is the difference - we are not ashamed of our names, and it is too bad if the foreigners find it difficult to pronounce the same.
 

Ray

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@Ray,

Most reports are unanimous in their predication that, without adequate safeguards the introduction of super-stores is likely to have devastating effects on workers' unions and unorganized/micro retail. But that is exactly the premise, which is why these safeguard are being introduced. Crucially, the states have a big say in the introduction of these regulations. And our vote bank politics will ensure that these exist.

I wouldn't expect Uniglobalunion to have an unbiased opinion on the formation of labour unions. Given that, I daresay a modicum of de-unionization is what India needs.

A good example to compare ourselves with is China. And there, despite the problems with food labelling and safety, labor, political infighting and arbitrary imposition of penalties, Walmart and other big stores have generally accentuated the retail environment, not depressed it.
FIne, Uniglobal maybe biased.

Here is a CBS report. Surely they are not biased.

It has been written by STACY BLACKMAN of the Columbia Business School professor Nelson Fraiman, who was born in Uruguay and played a significant role in designing the school's new Entrepreneurship and Competitiveness in Latin America (ECLA) program has some advice for North American companies hoping to succeed in Latin America.

Why Wal-Mart Failed in Brazil

"Large firms like Wal-Mart have gone to countries like Brazil and failed -- the same way they've gone to countries like Korea and failed, the same way they've gone to countries like Germany and failed -- mainly because of not understanding the local culture. The U.S. can become better at learning about the people and working together as equals, rather than imposing a series of systems and procedures that work here, but don't necessarily work there......

Why Wal-Mart Failed in Brazil - CBS News

Of course, it is too simplistic to say Walmart failed because of not adapting to local cultures. There are a host of other reasons too!
 
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Ray

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Key Studies on Big-Box Retail & Independent Business

Last update: November 13, 2012

Below are summaries and links to key studies that examine the impact of Wal-Mart and other large retail chains and, in some cases, the benefits of locally owned businesses. For ease of use, we've organized these studies into the following categories, although they do not all fit neatly into one category.

Economic Impact of Local Businesses vs. Chains Studies have found that locally owned stores generate much greater benefits for the local economy than national chains.
Retail Employment These studies examine whether the arrival of a superstore increases or decreases the number of retail jobs in the region.
Wages & Benefits Studies have found that big-box retailers, particularly Wal-Mart, are depressing wages and benefits for retail employees.
Existing Businesses These studies look at how the arrival of a big-box retailer displaces sales at existing businesses, which must then downsize or close. This results in job losses and declining tax revenue, which some of these studies quantify.
Poverty Rates Counties that have gained Wal-Mart stores have fared worse in terms of family poverty rates, according to this study.
Social and Civic Well-Being This study found that Wal-Mart reduces a community's level of social capital, as measured by voter turnout and the number of active community organizations.
City Costs These studies compare the municipal tax benefits of big-box development with the cost of providing these stores with city services, such as road maintenance, police and fire—finding that cities do not always come out ahead.
State Costs Because many of their employees do not earn enough to make ends meet, states are reporting high costs associated with providing healthcare (Medicaid) and other public assistance to big-box employees.
Subsidies The expansion of big-box retailers has been financed in part by massive development subsidies and tax advantages provided by local and state governments. These studies document those subsidies and their failure to produce real economic benefits for communities.
Consumers & Prices Are chains better for consumers?
Traffic How do vehicle miles traveled and trips increase as a result of big box developments?
Charitable Contributions Small businesses donate about twice as much per employee to charitable organizations as large businesses, according to this study
1. ECONOMIC IMPACT OF LOCAL BUSINESSES VS. CHAINS The following studies have found that locally owned stores generate much greater benefits for the local economy than national chains.

Indie Impact Study Series: Salt Lake City, Utah — Civic Economics, August 2012

In this study, Civic Economics analyzed data from fifteen independent retailers and seven independent restaurants, all located in Salt Lake City, and compared their local economic impact with four national retail chains (Barnes & Noble, Home Depot, Office Max, and Target) and three national restaurant chains (Darden, McDonald's, and P.F. Chang's). The study found that the local retailers return a total of 52 percent of their revenue to the local economy, compared to just 14 percent for the national chain retailers. Similarly, the local restaurants recirculate an average of 79 percent of their revenue locally, compared to 30 percent for the chain eateries. What accounts for the difference? In a handy graphic, Civic Economics shows the breakdown. Independent businesses spend more on local labor, goods procured locally for resale, and services from local providers. This means a much larger share of the money you spend at a locally owned store stays in your local economy, supporting a variety of other businesses and jobs.

Going Local: Quantifying the Economic Impacts of Buying from Locally Owned Businesses in Portland, Maine — by Garrett Martin and Amar Patel, Maine Center for Economic Policy, December 2011

On a dollar-for-dollar basis, the local economic impact of independently owned businesses is significantly greater than that of national chains, this study concludes. Analyzing data collected from 28 locally owned retail businesses in Portland, Maine, along with corporate filings for a representative national chain, the researchers found that every $100 spent at locally owned businesses contributes an additional $58 to the local economy. By comparison, $100 spent at a chain store in Portland yields just $33 in local economic impact. The study concludes that, if residents of the region were to shift 10 percent of their spending from chains to locally owned businesses, it would generate $127 million in additional local economic activity and 874 new jobs.

Thinking Outside the Box: A Report on Independent Merchants and the Local Economy -by Civic Economics, September 2009

This study examined financial data from 15 locally owned businesses in New Orleans and compared their impact on the local economy to that of an average SuperTarget store. The study found that only 16% of the money spent at a SuperTarget stays in the local economy. In contrast, the local retailers returned more than 32% of their revenue to the local economy. The primary difference was that the local stores purchase many goods and services from other local businesses, while Target does not. The study concludes that even modest shifts in spending patterns can make a big difference to the local economy. If residents and visitors were to shift 10% of their spending from chains to local businesses, it would generate an additional $235 million a year in local economic activity, creating many new opportunities and jobs. Likewise, a 10% shift in the opposite direction – less spending at local stores and more at chains – would lead to an economic contraction of the same magnitude. Another noteworthy finding of the study is that locally owned businesses require far less land to produce an equivalent amount of economic activity. The study found that a four-block stretch of Magazine Street, a traditional business district, provides 179,000 square feet of retail space, hosts about 100 individual businesses, and generates $105 million in sales, with $34 million remaining in the local economy. In contrast, a 179,000-square-foot SuperTarget generates $50 million in annual sales, with just $8 million remaining in the local economy, and requires an additional 300,000 square feet of space for its parking lot. See our New Rules article for more background on this study.

Local Works: Examining the Impact of Local Business on the West Michigan Economy – by Civic Economics, September 2008

This study concludes that if residents of Grand Rapids and surrounding Kent County, Michigan, were to redirect 10 percent of their total spending from chains to locally owned businesses, the result would be $140 million in new economic activity for the region, including 1,600 new jobs and $53 million in additional payroll. The study calculates the market share of independent businesses in four categories: pharmacy (41%), grocery (52%), restaurants (50%), and banks (6%). It analyzes how much of the money spent at these businesses stays in the area compared to national chains. Local restaurants, for example, return more than 56% of their revenue to the local economy in the form of wages, goods and services purchased locally, profits, and donations. Chain restaurants return only 37%. Measuring the total economic impact of this difference, including indirect and induced activity, the study estimates that $1 million spent at chain restaurants produces about $600,000 in additional local economic activity and supports 10 jobs. Spending $1 million at local restaurants, meanwhile, generates over $900,000 in added local economic activity and supports 15 jobs. The study also analyzes the economic impact of independent vs. chain businesses on a square footage basis, noting, "In a largely built-out city like Grand Rapids, policy dictates seeking the highest and best use of available properties, and this analysis strongly supports the idea that local firms should be the preferred tenants for city sites."

The San Francisco Retail Diversity Study – By Civic Economics, May 2007

This study finds that San Francisco remains a stronghold for locally owned businesses, which generate sizable benefits for the city's economy. The study has three parts. The first calculates market shares for independents and chains in several categories: bookstores, sporting goods stores, toy stores, and casual dining restaurants. In all four categories, independent businesses capture more than half of sales within the city of San Francisco, a much larger share than they have nationally. The second part examines the economic impact of locally owned businesses versus chains. It finds that local businesses buy more goods and services locally and employ more people locally per unit of sales (because they have no headquarters staff elsewhere). Every $1 million spent at local bookstores, for example, creates $321,000 in additional economic activity in the area, including $119,000 in wages paid to local employees. That same $1 million spent at chain bookstores generates only $188,000 in local economic activity, including $71,000 in local wages. The same was true in the other categories. For every $1 million in sales, independent toy stores create 2.22 local jobs, while chains create just 1.31. The final part of the study analyzes the impact of a modest shift in consumer spending. If residents were to redirect just 10 percent of their spending from chains to local businesses, that would generate $192 million in additional economic activity in San Francisco and almost 1,300 new jobs.

The Andersonville Study of Retail Economics – By Civic Economics, October 2004

This compelling study, commissioned by the Andersonville Development Corporation, finds that locally owned businesses generate 70 percent more local economic impact per square foot than chain stores. The study's authors, Dan Houston and Matt Cunningham of Civic Economics, analyzed ten locally owned restaurants, retail stores, and service providers in the Andersonville neighborhood on Chicago's north side and compared them with ten national chains competing in the same categories. They found that spending $100 at one of the neighborhood's independent businesses creates $68 in additional local economic activity, while spending $100 at a chain produces only $43 worth of local impact. They also found that the local businesses generated slightly more sales per square foot compared to the chains ($263 versus $243). Because chains funnel more of this revenue out of the local economy, the study concluded that, for every square foot of space occupied by a chain, the local economic impact is $105, compared to $179 for every square foot occupied by an independent business.

The Economic Impact of Locally Owned Businesses vs. Chains: A Case Study in Midcoast Maine – by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance and Friends of Midcoast Maine, September 2003.

Three times as much money stays in the local economy when you buy goods and services from locally owned businesses instead of large chain stores, according to this analysis, which tracked the revenue and expenditures of eight locally owned businesses in Midcoast Maine. The survey found that the businesses, with had combined sales of $5.7 million in 2002, spent 44.6 percent of their revenue within the surrounding two counties. Another 8.7 percent was spent elsewhere in the state of Maine. The four largest components of this local spending were: wages and benefits paid to local employees; goods and services purchased from other local businesses; profits that accrued to local owners; and taxes paid to local and state government. Using a variety of sources, the analysis estimates that a national big box retailer operating in Midcoast Maine returns just 14.1 percent of its revenue to the local economy, mostly in the form of payroll. The rest leaves the state, flowing to out-of-state suppliers or back to corporate headquarters. The survey also found that the local businesses contributed more to charity than national chains.

Economic Impact Analysis: A Case Study – by Civic Economics, December 2002.

This study examines the local economic impact of two locally owned businesses in Austin, Texas—Waterloo Records and Book People—and compares this with the economic return the community would receive from a Borders Books store. The study finds that spending $100 at Borders creates $13 worth of local economic activity, while spending $100 at the local stores generates $45 in local economic activity. The difference is attributed to three factors: a higher local payroll at the independent stores (because, unlike Borders, none of their operations are carried out a an out-of-town headquarters office); the local stores purchased more goods and services locally; and the local stores retained a much larger share of their profits within the local economy.

2. RETAIL EMPLOYMENT These studies examine whether the arrival of a superstore increases or decreases the number of retail jobs in the region.

The Effects of Wal-Mart on Local Labor Markets - by David Neumark (University of California-Irvine), Junfu Zhang (Clark University), and Stephen Ciccarella (Cornell University), Journal of Urban Economics, Mar. 2008

This study presents the most sophisticated analysis to date of Wal-Mart's impact on retail employment and wages. Analyzing national data, the study found that the opening of a Wal-Mart store reduces county-level retail employment by 150 jobs. Because Wal-Mart stores employ an average of 360 workers, this suggests that for every new retail job created by Wal-Mart, 1.4 jobs are lost as existing businesses downsize or close. The study also found that the arrival of a Wal-Mart store reduces total county-wide retail payroll by an average of about $1.2 million. This study improves substantially on previous studies by convincingly accounting for the endogeneity of the location and timing of Wal-Mart's entry into a particular local market. That is, Wal-Mart presumably does not locate stores randomly. When expanding into a particular region, it may, for example, opt to build in towns experiencing greater job growth. Unless this location selection bias is accounted for, one might compare job growth in towns that gained Wal-Mart stores versus those that did not and erroneously conclude that Wal-Mart caused an expansion in employment. The authors of this study have devised a persuasive method of accounting for this bias. They also argue that the method developed by Basker (see next item below) to account for this bias is flawed and therefore her conclusion that Wal-Mart has a small positive impact on retail employment is not reliable.

Job Creation or Destruction? Labor-Market Effects of Wal-Mart Expansion – By Emek Basker, University of Missouri, Review of Economics & Statistics, February 2005

Often cited and typically misrepresented by Wal-Mart supporters, this study examines the impact of the arrival of a Wal-Mart store on retail and wholesale employment. It looks at 1,749 counties that added a Wal-Mart between 1977 and 1998. It finds that Wal-Mart's arrival boosts retail employment by 100 jobs in the first year—far less than the 200-400 jobs the company says its stores create, because its arrival causes existing retailers to downsize and lay-off employees. Over the next four years, there is a loss of 40-60 additional retail jobs as more competing retailers downsize and close. The study also finds that Wal-Mart's arrival leads to a decline of approximately 20 local wholesale jobs in the first five years, and an additional 10 wholesale jobs over the long run (six or more years after Wal-Mart's arrival). (Wal-Mart handles its own distribution and does not rely on wholesalers). This works out to a net gain of just 10-30 retail and wholesale jobs, and the study does not examine whether these jobs are part-time or whether they pay more or less than the jobs eliminated by Wal-Mart. The study also found that, within five years of Wal- Mart's arrival, the counties had lost an average of four small retail businesses, one midsized store, and one large store. It does not estimate declines in revenue to retailers that survive. Basker looked at the effect of Wal-Mart on retail employment in neighboring communities, but found that the confidence intervals were too large (meaning the results showed wide variation) to draw any conclusion about Wal-Mart's impact. (Her initial working paper, published in 2002, reported an average decline of 30 retail jobs in surrounding communities, but, after correcting an error, she determined the confidence intervals were too large to produce a precise result.)

3. WAGES & BENEFITS These studies examine the effect of big-box chains, particularly Wal-Mart, on wages and benefits for retail employees.

Does Local Firm Ownership Matter? — by Stephan Goetz and David Fleming, Economic Development Quarterly, April 2011.

Goetz and Fleming analyze 2,953 counties, including both rural and urban places, and find that, after controlling for other factors that influence growth, those with a larger density of small, locally owned businesses experienced greater per capita income growth between 2000 and 2007. The presence of large, non-local businesses, meanwhile, had a negative effect on incomes.



Living Wage Policies and Big-box Retail: How a Higher Wage Standard Would Impact Wal-Mart Workers and Shoppers – UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education, April 2011.

About 900,000 Wal-Mart workers, or 65 percent of its U. S. workforce, are paid less than $12 an hour. More than one-fifth earn less than $9 an hour. Overall, Wal-Mart's hourly workers earn 12.4 percent less than retail workers as a whole. This study finds that raising their pay to a minimum of $12 an hour would lift many out of poverty, reduce their reliance on public assistance, and cost the average consumer, at most, $12.49 a year.

A Downward Push: The Impact of Wal-Mart Stores on Retail Wages and Benefits – By Arindrajit Dube, T. William Lester, and Barry Eidlin, UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education, December 2007

This study analyzes the impact of the opening of Wal-Mart stores on the earnings of retail workers. (It uses a similar technique to account for possible biases in Wal-Mart's store location decisions as the study described in the RETAIL EMPLOYMENT section above, "The Effects of Wal-Mart on Local Labor Markets.") This study focuses on stores that opened between 1992 and 2000 and concludes, "Opening a single Wal-Mart store lowers the average retail wage in the surrounding county between 0.5 and 0.9 percent." Not only did Wal-Mart lower average wage rates, but "every new Wal-Mart in a county reduced the combined or aggregate earnings of retail workers by around 1.5 percent." Because this number is higher than the reduction in average wages, it indicates that Wal-Mart not only lowered pay rates, but also reduced the total number of retail jobs. The study goes on to look at the cumulative impact of Wal-Mart store openings on retail earnings at the state level and nationwide. "At the national level, our study concludes that in 2000, total earnings of retail workers nationwide were reduced by $4.5 billion due to Wal-Mart's presence," the researchers find. Most of these losses were concentrated in metropolitan areas. Although Wal-Mart is often associated with rural areas, three-quarters of the stores it built in the 1990s were in metropolitan counties.

What Do We Know About Wal-Mart? – By Annette Bernhardt, Anmol Chaddha, and Siobhán McGrath, Brennan Center for Justice, August 2005

This scrupulously fact-checked and footnoted report outlines what we know about Wal-Mart, in terms of its wages, health insurance benefits, compliance with labor laws, and cost to states. It details average starting wages for various job classifications. It reports that Wal-Mart employees earn 20 percent less than retail workers on average. It outlines the out-of-pocket costs, coverage limitations, and eligibility requirements for the retailer's health insurance plan, and compiles information on what various states are spending to provide Medicaid to uninsured Wal-Mart employees and their children. The report also summarizes Wal-Mart's record of labor law violations.

Reviewing and Revising Wal-Mart's Benefits Strategy – Memo to the Wal-Mart Board of Directors from Susan Chambers, Wal-Mart's executive vice president for benefits, Oct. 2005

This internal memo leaked to Wal-Mart Watch assesses Wal-Mart's current health care benefits and offers strategies to both reduce the company's health insurance costs and neutralize criticism of its employment practices. The memo reports that only 48 percent of the company's employees are enrolled in its insurance plan, compared to an average of 68 percent for national employers. Excessive out-of-pocket costs, including expensive premiums and high deductibles, are to blame. "Our coverage is expensive for low-income families, and Wal-Mart has a significant percentage of Associates and their children on public assistance," the memo notes. Employees enrolled in Wal-Mart's insurance plan spend an average of 8 percent of their income on health care, nearly twice the national average. Almost 40 percent spend more than 16 percent of their income, a crippling cost for workers who earn less than $20,000 a year on average. The memo also reports that Wal-Mart has a larger share of its employees and their children enrolled in Medicaid compared to other companies. "In total, 46 percent of Associates' children are either on Medicaid or are uninsured," it notes. The memo offers strategies for reducing Wal-Mart's health care costs, including increasing the percentage of part-time employees and "design[ing] all jobs to include some physical activity (e.g., all cashiers do some cart gathering)." The latter recommendation aims to "dissuade unhealthy people from coming to work at Wal-Mart."

The Impact of Big Box Grocers on Southern California: Jobs, Wages, and Municipal Finances – Prepared for the Orange County Business Council by Dr. Marlon Boarnet of the University of California at Irvine and Dr. Randall Crane of the University of California at Los Angeles, 1999.

The most useful parts of this study deal with Wal-Mart's impact on wages. The study concluded that, as Wal-Mart builds supercenters in southern California, the company will absorb up to 20 percent of the region's grocery market and cut grocery workers' income by up to $1.4 billion annually. Unionized supermarket workers in southern California make the equivalent of $18.25 an hour in wages and benefits, according to the study, while Wal-Mart employees earn just $9.63 per hour. As Wal-Mart expands in the region, it will replace high-wage jobs with low-wage jobs. It will probably also force unionized supermarket workers to accept substantial wage and benefit cuts to keep their employers competitive. The combined losses are estimated in the range of $500 million to $1.4 billion. The study also compares health insurance benefits at unionized supermarkets and Wal-Mart, and examines the tax and revenue implications of supercenter development.

4. EXISTING BUSINESSES These studies look at how the arrival of a big-box retailer displaces sales at existing businesses, which must then downsize or close, resulting in job losses and declining tax revenue.

Mom-and-pop Meet Big-box: Complements Or Substitutes? — by John Haltiwanger, Ron Jarmin, and C.J. Krizan, Journal of Urban Economics, 2010.

In this study, economists John Haltiwanger, Ron Jarmin, and C.J. Krizan analyzed about 1,200 big-box store openings and looked at the impact on two sets of independent and small chain businesses in the vicinity: those competing directly with the new big box and those offering different products and services. For competing retailers, the study found "large, negative effects" on those within a 5-mile radius of the new big box, including a substantial number of store closures, and smaller but still significant impacts on those in a 5-10 mile radius. As for non-competing businesses, the study found that big-box stores generate no positive spillover. Nearby businesses offering other products and services neither increased their growth nor expanded in numbers after the big box opened.

The Impact of an Urban Wal-Mart Store on Area Businesses – by Julie Davis, David Merriman, Lucia Samayoa, Brian Flanagan, Ron Baiman, and Joe Persky, Economic Development Quarterly, October 2012. (Here's a earlier free version of the study.)

The opening of a Wal-Mart on the West Side of Chicago in 2006 led to the closure of about one-quarter of the businesses within a four-mile radius, according to this study by researchers at Loyola University. They tracked 306 businesses, checking their status before Wal-Mart opened and one and two years after it opened. More than half were also surveyed by phone about employees, work hours, and wages. By the second year, 82 of the businesses had closed. Businesses within close proximity of Wal-Mart had a 40 percent chance of closing. The probability of going out of business fell 6 percent with each mile away from Wal-Mart. These closures eliminated the equivalent of 300 full-time jobs, about as many Wal-Mart added to the area. Sales tax and employment data provided by the state of Illinois for Wal-Mart's zip code and surrounding zip codes confirmed that overall sales and employment in the neighborhood did not increase, but actually dipped from the trend line. Although Wal-Mart claims its urban stores recapture dollars leaking to the suburbs, the findings of this study suggest that urban Wal-Mart stores primarily displace sales from other city stores. "There is no evidence that Wal-Mart sparked any significant net growth in economic activity or employment in the area," the researchers conclude. The study also examines Wal-Mart's Job and Opportunity Zones initiative, which provided marketing for five local businesses, and found it largely ineffective.

Major Flaws Uncovered in Study Claiming Wal-Mart Has Not Harmed Small Businesses [PDF] – by Stacy Mitchell; Institute for Local Self-Reliance, December 2008

A new and widely publicized study, "Has Wal-Mart Buried Mom and Pop?", claims that there is no evidence that Wal-Mart has had an overall negative impact on the small business sector. A close inspection of the study by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, however, found major flaws. The authors failed to use the correct U. S. Census data when attempting to show that "mom and pop" businesses have not experienced a net decline over the past two decades. When the correct data set is used, it is clear that the small business sector is much less robust now than it once was, with the number of retail businesses with fewer than 10 employees declining by one-fifth from 1982-2002. This decrease is even more drastic when measured relative to the population. During the 20-year period, the number of retail firms with 1-4 employees per 1 million people fell by 38% and retail firms with 5-9 employees per 1 million people declined by 30%.

The Impact of 'Big-Box' Building Materials Stores on Host Towns and Surrounding Counties in a Midwestern State – by Economics Professor Kenneth E. Stone and Extension Program Specialist Georgeanne M. Artz, Iowa State University, 2001.

This study examines several Iowa communities where big box building supply stores, such as Menards and Home Depot, have opened in the last decade. Sales of hardware and building supplies in the host community and surrounding counties are tracked over several years to test what the authors call the "zero-sum-game theory," namely that the retail sales gains generated by big box stores are offset by sales losses at existing, often locally owned, retail stores. The results confirm the theory, finding that sales of hardware and building supplies grow in the host communities, but at the expense of sales in smaller towns nearby. Moreover, after a few years, many of the host communities experienced a reversal of fortune: sales of hardware and building supplies declined sharply, often dropping below their initial levels, as more big box stores opened in the surrounding region and saturated the market.

What Happened When Wal-Mart Came to Town? A Report on Three Iowa Communities with a Statistical Analysis of Seven Iowa Counties – by Thomas Muller and Elizabeth Humstone, National Trust For Historic Preservation, 1996.

This study examined the impact of Wal-Mart on several Iowa communities. It found that 84 percent of all sales at the new Wal-Mart stores came at the expense of existing businesses within the same county. Only 16 percent of sales came from outside the county—a finding which refutes the notion that Wal-Mart can act as a magnet drawing customers from a wide area and benefiting other businesses in town. "Although some suggest that the presence of Wal-Mart outside of, but near to, the downtown area results in additional activity downtown, both sales data and traffic data do not show this gain," the study concludes. "None of the nine case studies was experiencing a high enough level of population and income growth to absorb the Wal-Mart store without losses to other businesses." The study documents losses in downtown stores after Wal-Mart opened. "General merchandise stores were most affected," the study notes. "Other types of stores that closed include: automotive stores, hardware stores, drug stores, apparel stores, and sporting goods stores." The supposed tax benefits of Wal-Mart did not materialize either: "Although the local tax base added about $2 million with each Wal-Mart, the decline in retail stores following the opening had a depressing effect on property values in downtowns and on shopping strips, offsetting gains from the Wal-Mart property."

Competing with the Discount Mass Merchandisers – By Dr. Kenneth Stone, Iowa State University, 1995

The basic premise of this study and others by Ken Stone is that the retail "pie" is relatively fixed in size (it grows only incrementally as population and incomes grow). Consequently, when a company like Wal-Mart opens a giant store, it invariably captures a substantial slice of the retail pie, leaving smaller portions for existing businesses, which are then forced to downsize or close. This study of Wal-Mart's impact on Iowa towns found that the average superstore cost other merchants in the host town about $12 million a year in sales (as of 1995), while stores in smaller towns nearby also suffered substantial revenue losses. These sales losses resulted in the closure of 7,326 Iowa businesses between 1983 and 1993, including 555 grocery stores, 291 apparel stores, and 298 hardware stores. While towns that gained a Wal-Mart store initially experienced a rise in overall retail sales, after the first two or three years, retail sales began to decline. About one in four towns ending up with a lower level of retail activity than they had prior to Wal-Mart's arrival. Stone attributes this to Wal-Mart's strategy of saturating regions with multiple stores.

St. Albans, Vermont State Environmental Board Act 250 Decision, 1994

A cost/benefit analysis of a proposed Wal-Mart store in St. Albans, Vermont, found that the store would cause dozens of existing businesses to close, leading to a net loss of 110,000 square feet of retail space. The 214 jobs created by the new superstore would be offset by the loss of 381 jobs at other businesses. The analysis also found that the overall tax losses expected from the small business failures would be greater than the tax revenue generated by the new Wal-Mart. Moreover, the city would incur a variety of new costs to provide roads, sewers, police, and fire protection to service the sprawling new development. The analysis concluded that for every dollar in tax benefit created by the superstore, there would be 2.5 dollars in tax losses and public costs.

5. POVERTY RATES Counties that have gained Wal-Mart stores have fared worse in terms of family poverty rates, according to this study.

Wal-Mart and County-Wide Poverty – by Stephan Goetz and Hema Swaminathan, Social Science Quarterly, June 2006

The presence of a Wal-Mart store hinders a community's ability to move families out of poverty, according to this study. After controlling for other factors that influence poverty rates, the study found that U.S. counties that had more Wal-Mart stores in 1987 had a higher poverty rate in 1999 than did counties that started the period with fewer or no Wal-Mart stores. The study also found that counties that added Wal-Mart stores between 1987 and 1998 experienced higher poverty rates and greater usage of food stamps than counties where Wal-Mart did not build, all other things being equal. Although the study does not attempt to draw a conclusion about why Wal-Mart expands poverty, the study's authors suggest several possible factors, including a loss of social capital that occurs when locally owned businesses close and the shift from comparatively better paying jobs at independent retailers to lower paying jobs at Wal-Mart (an earlier, unpublished draft can be downloaded for free here.) Many university libraries also carry Social Science Quarterly.

6. SOCIAL AND CIVIC WELL-BEING This study found that Wal-Mart reduces a community's level of social capital, as measured by voter turnout and the number of active community organizations.

Wal-Mart and Social Capital – by Stephan J. Goetz and Anil Rupasingha, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, Dec. 2006.

The presence of a Wal-Mart store reduces a community's level of social capital, this study found. The study examined communities that had or gained Wal-Mart stores in the 1990s and controlled for other variables known to affect social capital stocks in a community, such as educational attainment. "Both the initial number of [Wal-Mart] stores and each store added per 10,000 persons during the decade reduced the overall social capital measure," Goetz and Rupasingha found. Communities that gained a Wal-Mart had fewer non-profit groups and social capital-generating associations (such as churches, political organizations, and business groups) per capita than those that did not. Wal-Mart's presence also depressed civic participation and is associated with lower voter turnout in the 2000 presidential election. Goetz and Rupasingha hypothesize that the drop in social capital is owned to the disappearance of local businesses and the decline of the downtown following Wal-Mart's arrival.

7. CITY COSTS These studies compare the municipal tax benefits of big-box development with the cost of providing these stores with city services, such as road maintenance, police and fire—finding that cities do not always come out ahead.

Rolling Back Property Tax Payments: How Wal-Mart Short-Changes Schools and other Public Services by Challenging Its Property Tax Assessments by Philip Mattera, Karla Walter, Julie Farb Blain and Colleen Ruddick, Good Jobs First, October 2007

This first-ever investigation of Wal-Mart's local property tax records finds that the retail giant systematically seeks to minimize its payment of taxes that support public schools and other vital local government services. Online appendices with lists of stores and distribution centers examined.

Understanding the Fiscal Impacts of Land Use in Ohio – by Randall Gross, Development Economics, August 2004

This report reviews and summarizes the findings of fiscal impact studies conducted in eight central Ohio communities between 1997 and 2003. In seven of the eight communities, retail development created a drain on municipal budgets (i.e., it required more in public services, such as road maintenance and police, than it generated in tax revenue). On average, retail buildings produced a net annual loss of $0.44 per square foot. "The concept that growth is always good for a community does not seem to correlate with the findings from various fiscal analyses conducted throughout central Ohio," the report concludes. It cautions cities not to be taken in by the promise of high tax revenue from a new development without also considering the additional costs of providing services. Unlike retail, office and industrial development, as well as some types of residential, produced a net tax benefit.

Fiscal Impact Analysis of Residential and Nonresidential Land Use Prototypes – by Tischler & Associates, July 2002.

Big box retail, shopping centers, and fast-food restaurants cost taxpayers in Barnstable, Massachusetts, more than they produce in revenue, according to this analysis. The study compares the tax revenue generated by different kinds of residential and commercial development with the actual cost of providing public services for each land use. The study found that big box retail generates a net annual deficit of $468 per 1,000 square feet. Shopping centers likewise produce an annual drain of $314 per 1,000 square feet. By far the most costly are fast-food restaurants, which have a net annual cost of $5,168 per 1,000 square feet. In contrast, the study found that specialty retail, a category that includes small-scale Main Street businesses, has a positive impact on public revenue (i.e., it generates more tax revenue than it costs to service). Specialty retail produces a net annual return of $326 per 1,000 square feet. Other commercial land uses that are revenue winners include business parks, offices, and hotels. The two main factors behind the higher costs for big box stores, shopping centers, and fast-food outlets, compared to specialty retail shops, are higher road maintenance costs (due to a much greater number of car trips per 1,000 square feet) and greater demand for public safety services.

Understanding the Tax Base Consequences of Local Economic Development Programs – by RKG Associates, 1998

The city of Concord, New Hampshire provides an example of what can happen when a community allows massive commercial growth while failing to protect its existing economic assets. Over the last 12 years, Concord added 2.8 million square feet of new commercial and industrial development. Yet tax revenue has actually declined by 19 percent. To make up for lost revenue, the town now has one of the highest property tax rates in the state. This study by RKG Associates, an independent economic consulting firm, found that there were several reasons for the declining tax base. One was that new retail development, primarily big box stores, had harmed local businesses. Property values, and subsequently tax revenue, in the older shopping areas had declined sharply. Another factor was that the new development had eroded the value of residential property, probably due in part to increased traffic and noise. The end result was that the city actually experienced a declining tax base despite all of the new growth.

Impacts of Development on DuPage County Property Taxes – Prepared by DuPage County Development Department for the County Regional Planning Commission, Illinois, October 1991.

This study demonstrated that the costs of encouraging new commercial development— extending highways and utilities, expanding municipal services like police and fire protection, and providing development financing and incentives—exceeded the new property and sales tax revenues the new development generated. The study concluded ""¦ there is a significant statistical relationship between new development (both residential and nonresidential) and increases in personal property taxes."

8. STATE COSTS Because many of their employees do not earn enough to make ends meet, states are reporting high costs associated with providing healthcare (Medicaid) and other public assistance to big-box employees. In addition to the following studies, see Good Jobs First's web page detailing states that have disclosed how much they are spending on providing health insurance for employees of Wal-Mart, Home Depot, Target, and other big-box retailers.

Hidden Cost of Wal-Mart Jobs – by UC Berkeley's Institute for Industrial Relations, August 2004

California taxpayers are spending $86 million a year providing healthcare and other public assistance to the state's 44,000 Wal-Mart employees, according to this study. The average Wal-Mart worker requires $730 in taxpayer-funded healthcare and $1,222 in other forms of assistance, such as food stamps and subsidized housing. Even compared to other retailers, Wal-Mart imposes an especially large burden on taxpayers. Wal-Mart workers earn 31 percent less than the average for workers at large retail companies and require 39 percent more in public assistance. The study estimates that if competing supermarkets and other large retailers adopt Wal-Mart's wage and benefit levels, it will cost California's taxpayers an additional $410 million a year in public assistance.

Everyday Low Wages: The Hidden Price We All Pay for Wal-Mart – by the Democratic Staff of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, Feb.2004

Although this study uses different methodology than the one above, it arrives at the same conclusion: Wal-Mart's low wages and meager benefits are costing taxpayers. The average Wal-Mart employee requires $2,100 per year in public assistance, including Section 8 housing vouchers, reduced-cost lunches for dependent children, health care programs, and tax credits for the working poor.

9. SUBSIDIES

The expansion of big-box retailers has been financed in part by massive development subsidies and tax advantages provided by local and state governments. These studies document those subsidies and their failure to produce real economic benefits for communities.

An Assessment of the Effectiveness and Fiscal Impacts of the Use of Local Development Incentives in the St. Louis Region By East-West Gateway Council of Governments; January 2011

This study finds that over the last 20 years local governments in the metropolitan St. Louis region have diverted more than $5.8 billion in public tax dollars to subsidize private development. About 80 percent of these subsidies supported the construction of big-box stores and shopping malls, mostly in affluent suburbs. Despite this large public expenditure, the region has seen virtually no economic growth. "The number of retail jobs has increased only slightly and, in real dollars, retail sales or per capita have not increased in years," the authors conclude. The subsidies have almost exclusively benefitted large chains, the study finds, and the region's retail sector has grown increasingly concentrated. More than 600 small retailers (under 10 employees) have closed in the last ten years. "Both municipal finance and quality of life suffer when a city loses its base of small retail establishments," the study notes. While some municipalities have seen gains in revenue as a result of luring retail development, these gains have come entirely at the expense of neighboring municipalities. Today, most of the region's local governments are in financial trouble. "A significant number of municipalities faced budget deficits, lay-offs and service cuts between 2000 and 2007, even though that was a period of time when the economy had generally fared well," the study finds.

Fishing for Taxpayer Cash by Andrew Stecker and Kevin Conner, Public Accountability Initiative, June 2010

This report documents how Bass Pro, an outdoor sporting goods chain, has won over $500 million dollars in taxpayer subsidies from cities and states by promising jobs, tourism and growth. But as this report shows, in city after city, Bass Pro has failed to deliver on its promises. In Mesa, AZ, for example, taxpayers put up $84 million for a development anchored by Bass Pro, but a year after opening the project was described as a "ghost town" that had done little more than undermine the viability of other retail areas. A taxpayer-subsidized Bass Pro in Harrisburg, PA, meanwile, created only one-third of the jobs promised.



Skimming the Sales Tax: How Wal-Mart and Other Big Retailers (Legally)Keep a Cut of the Taxes We Pay on Everyday Purchases [PDF] By Philip Mattera with Leigh McIlvaine; Good Jobs First; November 2008

This study highlights little-noticed laws in 26 states that allow retailers to keep a portion of the sales taxes they collect from shoppers. The stated purpose of these policies is to compensate retailers for the costs they incur collecting the tax. However, while half of these states cap the amount retailers can keep, the other 13 states have no cap. Because the cost of collecting sales taxes declines with volume, states without caps are providing big retailers with outsized compensation that bears little relationship to their actual costs. This practice is costing states over $1 billion a year and lining the pockets of large chains, notably Wal-Mart. The report breaks down the losses for each state. Additionally, this study exposes how local governments subsidize the large chains by giving them sales tax rebates or funding part of their projects with sales tax increment financing. Using these two strategies, Wal-Mart has received $130 million in sales tax diversion over the past decade.

Shopping for Subsidies: How Wal-Mart Uses Taxpayer Money to Finance Its Never-Ending Growth – by Good Jobs First, August 2004

This study identifies 244 Wal-Mart stores and distribution centers in 35 states that have received state and local development subsidies totaling just over $1 billion. The subsidies took many forms, including property tax rebates, free or reduced-priced land, and funding of site preparation and on-site infrastructure. Tax increment financing (TIF) ranked as one of the most common mechanisms used by local governments to underwrite Wal-Mart's growth. The total value of public giveaways to Wal-Mart is undoubtedly much higher than the $1 billion documented by the report. Obtaining complete data on subsidies is virtually impossible. In most states, local governments and state agencies are not required to report subsidies, and there is no centralized record or database. Good Jobs First relied primarily on the online archives of local newspapers to assemble the list of subsidy deals, the details of which were confirmed by interviews with local officials.

10. CONSUMERS & PRICES

Wrestling with Wal-Mart: Tradeoffs Between Profits, Prices, and Wages – By Jared Bernstein, Josh Bivens, and Arindrajit Dube, Economic Policy Institute, June 15, 2006

This analysis refutes the findings of a 2005 study by Global Insights (GI) that found that Wal-Mart saves U.S. consumers $263 billion annually, or $2,329 for the average household. The Economic Policy Institute concludes that the GI study is "fraught with problems." It identifies major internal inconsistencies in GI's figures and finds that the firm's statistical analysis "fails the most rudimentary sensitivity checks." The authors state, "Once we addressed these weaknesses the statistical and practical significance of Wal-Mart's price effects effectively vanished."

Time to Switch Drugstores? – Consumer Reports, October 2003.

"If you're among the 47 percent of Americans who get medicine from drugstore giants such as CVS, Eckerd, and Rite Aid, here's a prescription: Try shopping somewhere else. The best place to start looking is one of the 25,000 independent pharmacies that are making a comeback throughout the U.S." opens this article, which presents the results of a year-long survey of more than 32,000 readers about their drugstore experiences. The survey found that, by "an eye-popping margin," independent drugstores outranked all other pharmacies– –including drugstore chains, supermarkets, mass merchandisers (e.g., Wal-Mart), and internet companies—in terms of providing personal attention, offering health services such as in-store screenings, filling prescriptions quickly, supplying hard-to-find drugs, and obtaining out-of-stock medications within 24 hours. Prices at independent pharmacies were lower than at chain pharmacies, but higher than at mass merchandisers and internet companies.

11. TRAFFIC

Trip Generation Characteristics of Free-Standing Discount Superstores - by Georgiena M. Vivian, ITE Journal, August 2006

This study found that supercenters of 200,000 square feet or more generate an average of 42 percent more traffic than the rate listed in the Institute of Transportation Engineers Trip Generation manual. Traffic engineers, developers, and city officials use the figures in this manual to estimate the traffic impact of development projects. This study, which relies on traffic counts conducted at five supercenters in Oklahoma and Texas, indicates that the manual significantly underestimates the traffic generated by large supercenters (stores that combine general merchandise and a full grocery department) and that traffic analyses based on it are unreliable indicators of the actual traffic impact of a supercenter development.

12. CHARITABLE CONTRIBUTIONS

Business Contributions to Community Service – by Patricia Frishkoff, Small Business Administration, 1991

In 1991, Dr. Patricia Frishkoff, Director of the Family Business Program at Oregon State University, completed this study of charitable giving by 182 businesses in four communities. She combined cash donations with the value of in-kind contributions and found that the small businesses were more generous. Companies with fewer than 100 employees gave an average of $789 per employee, compared to $334 per employee at firms with more than 500 employees.

http://www.ilsr.org/key-studies-walmart-and-bigbox-retail/
 

Bangalorean

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I met a few D'Silva and Joseph from India.

One of news anchors in China's CCTV is Indian whose surname is Jacob.

And your defense minister is Anthony (or Antony?). And a Fernandez, what's his job? :rofl:
@amoy - those are their actual names, the names they were given by their parents. India has a significant number of Christians, FYI.

Having interacted with Chinese and other East Asians, I can confirm that is absolutely true that most of them who work with foreigners and in MNCs adopt Anglicized names. Please do not deny this!
 
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Rage

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FIne, Uniglobal maybe biased.

Here is a CBS report. Surely they are not biased.

It has been written by STACY BLACKMAN of the Columbia Business School professor Nelson Fraiman, who was born in Uruguay and played a significant role in designing the school's new Entrepreneurship and Competitiveness in Latin America (ECLA) program has some advice for North American companies hoping to succeed in Latin America.

Why Wal-Mart Failed in Brazil

"Large firms like Wal-Mart have gone to countries like Brazil and failed -- the same way they've gone to countries like Korea and failed, the same way they've gone to countries like Germany and failed -- mainly because of not understanding the local culture. The U.S. can become better at learning about the people and working together as equals, rather than imposing a series of systems and procedures that work here, but don't necessarily work there......

Why Wal-Mart Failed in Brazil - CBS News

Of course, it is too simplistic to say Walmart failed because of not adapting to local cultures. There are a host of other reasons too!
What are we discussing here? The impact, good or bad, of big multi-brand retail chains, like Wal Mart, on India's retail environment, its labor laws and management, its 'back-end' infrastructure and the attendant effects on its economy.

The biggest drawback of large scale multi-brand retail chains, specific to Walmart, has been the depressor effect on competitors' employee wages. But other big mult-brand retailers like Costco, which maintain a profit margin less than two-thirds that of Walmart's, have had exactly the opposite effect. Wage regulation: in that the Minimum Wage Act being extended to multi-brand retail, will have to be introduced to ensure this 'Walmart effect' does not outpace competitors' effects. But domestic competitors, such as Reliance Fresh / Reliance Digital and Big Bazaar, already offer wages so low, as to approximate the National Floor Level of the Minimum Wage. Tellingly, nobody seems to have drawn attention to this phenomenon.

One additional fact to remember, especially apropos of wage rates of competitors employees, is that small multi-brand retail stores in India generally don't hire 'employees', being managed by the family itself.

I would certainly not concur with Ms. Blackman that Walmart has failed in Brazil, Korea or Japan. Walmart started its operations with two supercenters and three Sam's clubs in the state of São Paulo in 1995. In 17 years, it has grown to become the third largest retailer in Brazil, with 534 stores. In Germany, despite stiff competition from Germany's own superstores, Wal mart surged ahead with market share in the late 1990's, losing out only when they could not offer any compelling value proposition to customers in comparison to other large multi-brand retail competitors. That can be seen as instructive for our very own retail scenario.

If Walmart cannot offer decidedly compelling value propositions to customers: whether that be price-based, convenience-based, differentiated quality-based, quantity-based or credit-based value propositions, that is the space for smaller multi-brand retail competitors.

Wal Mart most certainly must adapt to survive in India. But that can be seen to be a strength of the Indian economy, not its vulnerability. Besides, just as countries' economic strategies evolve, so do corporate strategies. And in the end result, just as McDonald's has had to evolve in India to cater to local tastes, big multi-brand retail stores, of which Walmart is just one, will have to evolve as well.
 
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Expect India to be best-performing BRIC market in 2013: Adrian Mowat, JP Morgan


In an interview with ET Now, Adrian Mowat, Chief Emerging Market and Asian Equity Strategist, JP Morgan, talks about the current market scenario, fiscal cliff and his expectations from 2013. Excerpts:

ET Now: In 2013, what should Indian investors focus on? Should they focus on quality or is it now time to bet on the beta part of the market?

Adrian Mowat: What you need to do is to move out of defensive sectors such as staples and the IT sector which have benefited from the weak rupee and you should be buying the balance of the market. You need to have long financials, engineering, building materials, and maybe have a look at some of the real estate names and consumer discretionary stocks as well. So absolutely move out of defensive names and get positioned for what we think will be a good cyclical recovery in the Indian economy.

ET Now: India is indeed your top BRIC pick in 2013. What makes you so bullish? Do you expect the government to be able to push for reforms now?

Adrian Mowat: Yes, there are a number of layers to our bullishness on India. Indian companies delivered earnings growth in 2012 despite a very tough policy environment and a relatively weak economy with strong inflation. That compares very well with the other BRIC nations where there is no delivery of earnings growth. So Indian companies are used to difficult environment and if we look at the cyclical factors at play in India, you have got a very competitive currency which is a monetary stimulus.

We expect Indian companies to borrow abroad. There is very strong demand for EM fixed income which should allow money market rates in India to fall. Then if we look at the policy environment, it was extremely poor about four months ago. We have had a change in the Finance Minister. The Finance Minister has come in and announced a lot of reforms. There is a massive amount of scepticism about the ability of the coalition to pass reforms through the Parliament. Yet we have this FDI into retail going through both the lower house and the upper house overnight. That is very encouraging. What that will mean for Indian businesses is those investment decisions that have been put on hold are very likely to be put in place as we go into 2013. So we are optimistic on the Indian economy, Indian earnings. The market valuation is well within the normal range and so we think India is going to be one of the best performing major emerging markets in 2013.

ET Now: For 2013, you are advising clients to buy banks. Now what makes you bullish on banks? Are you hoping that the Reserve Bank of India policy action will have banks to make more money or are you hoping that the investment cycle will pick up?

Adrian Mowat: If we look at nonperforming assets, they tended to be more in the PSU banks, but part of the policy reform may reduce some of the risks for nonperforming loans for PSU banks. The trend with the major private sector banks has been reasonably healthy. So I am not too concerned about nonperforming loans, but I just see the Indian banks as being a good proxy on improving domestic economy.

ET Now: The other theme that you like is Indian consumption. What continues to make is so bullish on this one?

Adrian Mowat: There has been a lot of criticism about the Indian economy at the macro level. What we see as we go through 2013 is that there is going to be improvement in the Indian economy and consumer discretionaries will benefit from that.
ET Now: If you believe that the investment cycle will pick up momentum, how would you advise investors to play the Indian infrastructure sector?

Adrian Mowat: Absolutely on infrastructure names who are already running as are building material names and I would stay long on these stocks.

ET Now: Coming to the Indian index, we are close to all-time highs. Do you expect us to hit new highs in the near term and what kind of returns can one expect in the first half of 2013?

Adrian Mowat: A return in excess of 20% out of Indian equities is very possible over the next 12 months. That will be partly earnings growth, partly PE re-rating and I continue to believe that this is going to be the best-performing market within the BRICs.

ET Now: What about global factors? How do you see the fiscal cliff situation panning out and could there be a serious correction in global equities indeed if we see a scare on the cliff?

Adrian Mowat: Yes, this is really moving into a game theory. The fiscal cliff is the main point of discussion with investors globally. We are all tracking the negotiations or maybe lack of negotiations. So it is a reasonably well understood environment. Most investors are looking for it to provide a buying opportunity. So perhaps the weakness into the fiscal cliff will be more modest than what the market participants imagine. We need to understand that regardless of the negotiation, you will get an increase in payroll taxes which will mean that in the first quarter of 2013, the US economic growth will be soft and we will see momentum building throughout the year. So it is possible that you might get a correction at some point in the first quarter if people are concerned about that soft data.

ET Now: Eurozone seems to be coming out of the woods. What assumptions have you made for that region while drafting your investment strategy?

Adrian Mowat: Yes, Europe will come out of recession and we will grow modestly next year. We will have 75 basis points less of fiscal drag. We have a very different ECB as we leave 2012 versus the one we entered 2012 with. The actions with the OMT programme and Mario Draghi making commitments to do whatever is necessary to protect the euro, this is a very different environment. So the level of outstanding debt there in the market is down meaningfully. So we think the macro risks in Europe are lower and there is possibly the positive surprise that Europe exits recession next year.

ET Now: Could closure on China be another risk because currently you are underweight on China?

Adrian Mowat: Yes, we have been concerned about the profit outlook in China. The Chinese economy is definitely stabilising, we had some good data out of for the weekend. The problem is, if you look at non-financials within the Chinese economy, there is 14% sales growth year to date, but only 0.5% profit growth and we are struggling with a situation of overcapacity in China. What we are hoping is that companies are going to cut back on capex in order to rebuild operating capacity utilisation, operating margins and ultimately profitability. So China could continue to slow into the early part of 2013.

ET Now: The last few weeks for India have been very good. We have performed extremely well, thanks to strong inflows, but the big question is -- will they continue?

Adrian Mowat: India will benefit from two things: one is the ongoing FII inflow and the second is less redemptions in the local mutual funds and insurance industry, and India has had to cope with relatively significant redemptions by domestic investors and that has been an important drag on the market. So I see that as being less of a drag and continued foreign institutional investor inflows.

Expect India to be best-performing BRIC market in 2013: Adrian Mowat, JP Morgan - The Economic Times
 

nimo_cn

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@amoy - those are their actual names, the names they were given by their parents. India has a significant number of Christians, FYI.

Having interacted with Chinese and other East Asians, I can confirm that is absolutely true that most of them who work with foreigners and in MNCs adopt Anglicized names. Please do not deny this!
I don't think amoy was to deny the phenomenon among Chinese working with MNCs, but to question Ray's attempt to overinterpret it by equaling adopting English names in work places to "forsake his heritage and sell one's soul ".

In my opinion, Indians having English names as their actual names is much more "forsake one's heritage and sell one's soul".
 
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cir

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Pls refrain from comparing a galloping horse with a crawling tortoise。
 

cir

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I don't think amoy was to deny the phenomenon among Chinese working with MNCs, but to question Ray's attempt to overinterpret it by equaling adopting English names in work places to "forsake his heritage and sell one's soul ".

In my opinion, Indians having English names as their actual names is much more "forsake one's heritage and sell one's soul".
Why waste time with someone from a country of which the official language is a foreign language?

These people are harmless,though they beome shameless when their pride is hurt。
 

cloud_9

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Pls refrain from comparing a galloping horse with a crawling tortoise。
Life span of Tortoise > 150 years,Horse = 30 (Max).
Secondly Horses can't Gallop for long :D
 

Bangalorean

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I don't think amoy was to deny the phenomenon among Chinese working with MNCs, but to question Ray's attempt to overinterpret it by equaling adopting English names in work places to "forsake his heritage and sell one's soul ".

In my opinion, Indians having English names as their actual names is much more "forsake one's heritage and sell one's soul".
Those are Christian names, and that is their culture and heritage. I am no expert on Christianity, but afaik, most of those names are taken from the bible.

We also have lots of Indians Muslims named "Mohammed" and "Ahmed". These are names imported from the Arabian peninsula, if you look at it that way - but that's not how it works. Those are Islamic names, and those names are actually their culture and heritage.
 

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