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Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.

 
Concerned Aussie from Perth
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06/29/2005 12:24 PM
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Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
Never forget this family!

FYi


This article appears in the November 21, 2003 issue of Executive Intelligence Review.
Wal-Mart Collapses
U.S. Cities and Towns
by Richard Freeman

[The charts referenced in this article are available to paid subscribers of Electronic Intelligence Weekly.]

During the last 20 years, Wal-Mart has moved into communities and destroyed them, wiping out stores, slashing the tax base, and turning downtown areas into ghost-towns. This is accomplished through Wal-Mart´s policy of paying workers below subsistence wages, and importing goods that have been produced under slave-labor conditions overseas. Often, communities will even give Wal-Mart tax incentives, for the right to be destroyed.

Wal-Mart both reflects, and is, a major driving force for America´s deadly implementation of the Imperial Rome model. Unable to produce physical goods to sustain its own existence, the United States, like Rome, sucks in imported goods from around the world, using, in this case, a dollar that is over-valued by 50-60%. America has been transformed from a producer to a consumer society. From the 1940s through the early 1960s, through its technologically-advanced manufacturing-agricultural economy, America produced new value that contributed to mankind´s advancement. Through a "post-industrial society" policy, the bankers have pushed Wal-Mart to the top of the heap, so that it is now the world´s largest corporation, with $245.5 billion in sales last year. Wal-Mart, which produces no value-added whatsoever, dominates the geometry that governs the U.S. consumer society. America consumes goods that others produce, which Wal-Mart markets. Wal-Mart dictates, through its demand for low prices, that its suppliers outsource their production to foreign nations, further ripping down America´s battered domestic manufacturing and agricultural capability, in a self-feeding process.

Presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche has called for an international boycott of Wal-Mart. He told a cadre school of the LaRouche Youth Movement on Nov. 10: "Wal-Mart is probably one of the major foreign enemies of the United States! And, it´s based in the United States. Where Wal-Mart strides, whole communities collapse! It runs in like a vampire: It flies in by night, and sucks the blood of the citizens, and the cows, and so forth. In the morning, there´s not much left! Except unemployment and cheap labor. What Wal-Mart is doing to many communities of the Americas, is comparable to what happens to the poor Chinese, who are victims of the cheap-labor programs, which supply most of the product which Wal-Mart sells, as cheap-labor product."

Wal-Mart pays its American workers sweat-shop wages, and enforces a worldwide system of concentration camp production plants, where some workers are literally kept as indentured servants (see EIR, Nov. 14). Here, we look at how Wal-Mart has laid waste communities from Iowa to Mississippi, from Ohio to Oklahoma.
Destroying Iowa

Iowa represents the paradigm of Wal-Mart´s destruction of a state and its communities. Iowa is a leading agricultural state, with an industrial center in its northeast. In 1983, Wal-Mart opened its first store in the state. Since that time, the number of other retail stores that Wal-Mart has forced to close in Iowa, in communities of 5,000 or fewer people, is immense.

Sam Walton started Wal-Mart in his home town of Bentonville, Arkansas in 1962. At first he concentrated on Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Texas, along with a few other southern states. Beginning in the 1980s, he spread Wal-Mart out as a national chain, shifting from discount stores with 40-70,000 square feet of sales space, to increasingly building Sam´s Club and supercenters, which typically have 150-200,000 square feet. The idea was to use its ability to sell a huge volume of goods, its sweat-shop pay to American workers, and its flood of cheap imports, to blow apart any competition. In the October 1996 issue of Wal-Mart Today, an internal company newsletter, Tom Coughlin, executive vice president for operations, summed up the approach: "At Wal-Mart, we make dust. Our competitors eat dust."

In looking at Iowa, we encounter a myth: that when Wal-Mart opened a store in Town A, it may have hurt by a small amount the sales of stores in other towns neighboring Town A—as the people from the other towns went to Wal-Mart to do some of their shopping; but nonetheless, Wal-Mart so increased the volume of sales at its own store and other stores in Town A, that the stores in the overall region experienced significant sales growth and job growth. Wal-Mart hired compliant research and marketing firms to "prove" this point. This is a lie.

We look at what happened to Iowa communities of 5,000 or fewer people. Significant research has been done in this area by Prof. Kenneth Stone of Iowa State University, which we draw upon. Since it is difficult to see what effect occurred after only one or two years, we look at the effects after ten years or longer.

Using sales tax records, Professor Stone compared the change in sales volume at stores located in towns where Wal-Mart opened one of its stores (a "Wal-Mart Town"), and in the neighboring towns where Wal-mart did not open a store ("Neighboring Non Wal-Mart Town"). In cases selected from the study, the sales at Wal-Mart stores themselves are not included, since the focus here is to measure the "Wal-Mart effect": Once Wal-Mart opens a store, what happens to all the other stores in the neighboring communities, in Iowa communities of 5,000 or fewer people?

Figure 1 presents the change in sales volume for Iowa home furnishings stores (furniture stores, major appliance stores, drapery stores, etc.). One year after Wal-Mart opened a store in a town, in the Neighboring Non Wal-Mart Towns, at home furnishing stores the sales volume collapsed by 14%. People from the Non Wal-Mart Towns travelled to the towns where a Wal-Mart had opened, to purchase a share of their home furnishings at the Wal-Mart store. However, by the tenth year after the Wal-Mart store had opened, in the Neighboring Non Wal-Mart Towns, at home furnishing stores the sales volume had fallen a stunning 31% below the level it had been ten years earlier. A large number of home furnishing stores were forced to close.

In the Wal-Mart Towns, by the tenth year after the Wal-Mart store had opened, the sales volume at home furnishing stores had declined by only 1%. Clearly, the home furnishing stores located at Neighboring Non Wal-Mart Towns, had suffered the brunt of the damage.

Figure 2 presents the change in sales volume for Iowa specialty stores (sporting goods stores, druggists, jewelry stores, card and gift shops, florists, etc.). In the Wal-Mart Towns, by the tenth year after the Wal-Mart store had opened, the sales volume at specialty stores had plunged by 17%. In the Neighboring Non Wal-Mart Towns, by the tenth year after the Wal-Mart store had opened, the sales volume at specialty stores had tumbled by 28%.

Figure 3 presents the change in sales volume for Iowa apparel stores, showing a 28% decline by the tenth year in both Wal-Mart Towns and Non Wal-Mart Towns. The Wal-Mart Towns had not escaped the Wal-Mart effect.

Thus, Wal-Mart´s assertion that the sales by a range of stores in Neighboring Non Wal-Mart Towns would fall by a small amount, and that the sales volume by a range of stores in Wal-Mart Towns would rise significantly, is completely false.

Putting aside this myth, Figure 4 shows the catastrophe caused by the Wal-Mart effect in Iowa, inclusive of towns that did and did not have a Wal-Mart store. The period under consideration is 1983-96, three years longer than the earlier study, giving three more years of the devastation. By 1996, 13 years after a Wal-Mart had opened in a town, the volume of sales at department stores, which includes Wal-Mart and other large discount chains, rose by 42%. However, since 1983, sales at grocery stores fell by 11%; sales at drug stores fell by 32%; and sales at men´s and boys´ stores dropped headlong by 59%. Iowa´s retail and grocery stores, which form the underpinning of communities, had been ravaged.

Table 1 shows the second phase of the Wal-Mart effect: the closing of stores whose revenues had collapsed. All told, a staggering 7,326 stores closed in Iowa communities of 5,000 or less people (the table covers a ten-year period through 1993; were it to cover the longer period through 1996, the number of store closings would be even greater). The health and vitality of these communities, including employment at rising wages and benefits, the generation of taxes, etc., will not be restored.
Nationwide Blood-Letting

Wal-Mart destroyed other communities and cities. For example:

Toledo, Ohio. Author Al Norman describes the effect of Wal-Mart and Home Depot (another outsourcing chain) on Toledo: "When I went for a walk in downtown Toledo, I passed the old Lamson dry goods store: 9 stories of empty retail space. Each floor is the size of a football field. The building served as the home of a Macy´s Department store from 1924 to 1984. For the past fourteen years, the store has been empty. The City now owns it, which means the taxpayers of Toledo are paying the freight for its upkeep."

Nowata, Oklahoma. In 1982, Wal-Mart opened a store on the outskirts of Nowata, a town of 4,000 people. Half of the small businesses in downtown Nowata shut down. Then in 1994, Wal-Mart abruptly closed this store, as well as another in a nearby town, and opened up a supercenter in Bartlesville, which is 30 miles away, leaving Nowata prostrate.

Mississippi. A study found that in small towns in the state, five years after the opening of a Wal-Mart, the dollar volume of grocery store trade had collapsed 17%.

Vermont. In an attempt to stop Wal-Mart from becoming large in the state, various towns passed restrictions that would halt Wal-Mart construction. Wal-Mart built stores in the neighboring New Hampshire and New York, which sucked business out of Vermont.
Collapsing Tax Revenue

Despite all this, many states and communities are using taxpayers´ money to finance subsidies to Wal-Mart, to come in and rape them.

In 1999, it was reported that in Olivette, Missouri, a developer received a tax incentive of up to $38.9 million for a construction project including a Wal-Mart and a Sam´s Club—more than a third of the projected total cost of the project. In 1998, it was reported that the city of Chesterfield, Missouri was supplying $25.5 million in tax incentives toward the construction of a $100 million-plus mall, anchored by a Wal-Mart. In 2001, Ohio approved $10 million in tax credits and other assistance for Wal-Mart to build two distribution centers and an eyeglass-manufacturing facility.

[link to www.larouchepub.com]

Last Edited by Phennommennonn on 10/09/2011 05:29 PM
Concerned Aussie from Perth  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
This is upsetting.


This article appears in the November 28, 2003 issue of Executive Intelligence Review.
Wal-Mart `Eats´ More
U.S. Manufacturers
by Richard Freeman

In mid-November, Wal-Mart, the world´s largest corporation and leader of the "globalization" drive, forced the closing of a national children´s clothing store, Kids ´R´ Us, and pushed the famous Hoover vacuum cleaner manufacturer to the brink; by the end of November, it is expected that Hoover may announce the shift of a substantial portion of its production facilities to Mexico, laying off hundreds of American workers.

Forcing the closure of competing retail stores is a Wal-Mart specialty, as is its destruction of many of America´s leading textile and apparel manufacturers and food companies.

As EIR has shown in a series of articles (Nov. 14, Nov. 21), Wal-Mart is a driving force for America´s implementation of the Imperial Rome model: Unable to reproduce its own population´s existence, the United States has, for the past two decades, used an over-valued dollar to import goods from abroad. Wal-Mart markets an immense volume of these goods, many of which are produced under slave-labor conditions. It pays below-subsistence wages to its American workers, and drives down the wages of competing retail stores.

On Nov. 1, Democratic Presidential pre-candidate Lyndon LaRouche put a spotlight on the matter, with a call for a national and international boycott of Wal-Mart. On Nov. 18, he told a campaign meeting in St. Louis, Missouri: "The most important subversive enemy against the United States people and economy today, is Wal-Mart!" He denounced Wal-Mart´s forcing companies to outsource, causing the exodus of millions of manufacturing jobs. The reason households shopped at Wal-Mart, he said, is that their collapsed incomes make them unable to purchase goods at higher prices.
Gutting Companies

On Nov. 17, the national retail chain Toys ´R´ Us, announced that it would close 146 of the stores of its Kids ´R´ Us subdivision, which sells clothing, as well as 36 of its Imaginarium stores (which sell "educational" toys and games). The shutdowns will be completed by Jan. 31, 2004, eliminating up to 3,800 jobs. Kids ´R´ Us was unable to slash the prices of its children´s clothing deeply enough to compete with Wal-Mart.

Moreover, Wal-Mart has launched an aggressive campaign, through cut-throat pricing, to destroy the parent company, Toys ´R´ Us, the second-largest toy seller (after Wal-Mart) in America. As an example of how this strategy operates: The popular Hot Wheels T-Wreck Play Set toy sells for $42 wholesale. However, according to the Nov. 19 Wall Street Journal, Wal-Mart is now selling that very toy at $29.74, a loss of more than $10 per unit. Wal-Mart sells 21% of all toys sold in America, and if it knocks out its leading competitor, its share could reach 30%.

Hoover has been a leading name in vacuum cleaners for nearly 100 years. During the third quarter of this year, Hoover´s vacuum-cleaner sales declined by 20%, which the company blamed on competitors´ models priced at $79—made in Asia to meet Wal-Mart´s price demands—outselling Hoover´s $100-plus vacuums produced in the United States. Hoover cannot withstand such drops in sales volumes. Hoover´s parent company, Maytag, is demanding cuts in health insurance and other benefits, plus changes in job-security rules for production workers at its Hoover vacuum manufacturing plant in North Canton, Ohio. If the workers don´t cave in, Maytag has stated that it will move Hoover vacuum production to cheap-wage sites in Texas, and to maquiladoras in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico.
Textile and Apparel, and Food Sectors

No company is safe from Wal-Mart´s unswerving assault, but particularly at risk are manufacturing concerns in the textile and apparel sector, and in the food sector.

Wal-Mart has ravaged companies by leveraging its enormous sales power, and its access to products produced by slave-labor, to make suppliers follow its pricing decisions. If the supplier company doesn´t sell its goods at the price Wal-Mart sets, Wal-Mart denies them shelf space at its stores, which destroys that company. However, even when a supplier meets Wal-Mart´s prices, the prices are so low, and the supplier loses so much money, that the supplier is forced into bankruptcy. Wal-Mart´s 2002 sales of $244.5 billion were larger than the sales of Sears, Target, J.C. Penny, K-Mart, Safeway, and Kroger combined.

Textiles and Apparel:

* Carolina Mills is a 75-year-old company that supplies thread, yarn, and textile finishing to apparel-makers—half of which supply Wal-Mart. But since 2000, Carolina Mills´ customers have begun to find imported clothing sold so cheaply at Wal-Mart, that Carolina Mills could not compete even if they paid their workers nothing! Since 2000, Carolina Mills has shrunk from 17 factories to 7, and from 2,600 employees to 1,200. Steve Dobbins, the CEO of Carolina Mills, told the December issue of Fast-Company magazine: "People ask, ´How can it be bad for things to come into the U.S. cheaply? How can it be bad to have a bargain at Wal-Mart?´ But you can´t buy anything if you´re not employed. We are shopping ourselves out of jobs" (emphasis added).

* Lovable Garments, which was founded in 1926, had, by the 1990s, become the sixth-largest producer of women´s lingerie in the United States, employing 700 workers. Wal-Mart became the biggest purchaser of Lovable´s goods; in 1995, Wal-Mart demanded that Lovable slash its prices to compete with cheap imports. When Lovable indicated it could not do that, Wal-Mart illegally reneged on its contract, and outsourced the lingerie production to Ibero-America, Asia, and China. Without the Wal-Mart market, in 1998 Lovable had to close its American manufacturing facilities and fire the workers. Stated Frank Garson, who was then Lovable´s president, "Their actions to pulverize people are unnecessary. Wal-Mart chewed us up and spit us out."

Food:

* Vlasic Pickles was roped into a contract with Wal-Mart, in which Wal-Mart sold a 3 gallon jar of whole pickles for $2.97. Wal-Mart sold 240,000 gallons of pickles per week. But the price of the 3 gallon jar was so low, that it vastly undercut Vlasic´s sales of 8 ounce and 16 ounce jars of cut pickles; further, Vlasic only made a few pennies per 3 gallon jar. With its profits tumbling, Vlasic asked Wal-Mart for the right to raise the price per 3 gallon jar to $3.49, and according to a Vlasic executive, Wal-Mart threatened that if Vlasic tried to back out of this feature of the contract, Wal-Mart would cease carrying any Vlasic product. Eventually, a Wal-Mart executive said, "Well, we´ve done to pickles what we did to orange juice. We´ve killed it"—meaning it had wiped out competitor products. Finally, it allowed Vlasic to raise prices; but in January 2001, Vlasic filed for bankruptcy.

Destroying Labor Overseas

Wal-Mart buys a lot of its goods from China, which in many sections of the country, pays very low wages. One case that has come to light concerns the Ching Hai Electric Works Co. in Shajing, which produces electric fans. The factory makes several million fans per year, and sells them under many of the world´s leading brand names, and also under two of the company´s own names. The workers´ starting salary is $32 per month, which is more than 40% below China´s minimum wage of $56 per month. There are also reportedly many workplace accidents in the factory. In the late 1990s, Wal-Mart started making demands that the price of the fans be lowered, and they have fallen from approximately $7, to $4 per fan. But to lower the price, the manager of the plant had to cut its workforce in half, to 1,500 workers, while maintaining the same level of orders. This has led to many workers working 14 hours per day, for a pittance.
[link to www.larouchepub.com]

Last Edited by Phennommennonn on 10/23/2011 06:50 PM
flame  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
Don´t remind me..I live in Iowa..new store went in 3 months ago...the neighborhood grocery stores have all lost seveal hundred thousand dollars a week since..never mind the other mom and pop stores...the town council voted Wal-Mart in alright..one of the council members owned the land Wal-Mart wanted to buy...go figure.
Cloud Watcher  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
Here´s what I think of Walmart:zkk_exanis:
Concerned Aussie from Perth  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
bump for want2knowy
want2knowy  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
Here´s a good PDF file on the Evil Empire.

[link to msucares.com]
Concerned Aussie from Perth  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
Rumour has it Wal-mart May buy Coles Myer or Woolworths in Australia in the near future..... our big dept stores and supermarket chains.

OH F*cking great. Not. Grrrr

Of course most dumb Aussies will go yay!!
tellithowitis  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
Stop all the bitching! You have all shopped there, at least once. Admit it!
And I bet the concerned aussie from perth buys at Bunnings and Target and Kmart all the time. You idiots have no idea. Windbags is all you are
Concerned Aussie from Perth  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
"Stop all the bitching! You have all shopped there, at least once. Admit it!
And I bet the concerned aussie from perth buys at Bunnings and Target and Kmart all the time. You idiots have no idea. Windbags is all you are"

Bunnings..never again. Been years
K-mart-never again, but wen´t about 5 years ago
Target- never again, wen´t about 2 years ago

Always but from local deli´s and smaller stores. Always!

Support the local Butcher, Fruit and Vege shop, and local small business.

Other Aussies im not so sure.

We have no idea you say...oookkkkk.thwak
Anonymous Coward
12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
Well I dont even shop at wollies or coles! I go the local fruiters at the old converted sevos and I go to the lebo and asian and greek shops
want2knowy  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
What the sheeple don´t realize, one of the main componants of predatory pricing, is to sell below cost to undermine the competition (the consumers love this). Once the competition is gone, then Wally is the only game in town, and the prices go up. Wally recoups all of its loss´s from predatory pricing, and the consumer foots the bill, forever.

When Wally comes to Australia, it would be in the best interest of local business´s to fight for their livelihood, before Wally breaks ground.
Concerned Aussie from Perth  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
Quality of fruit and vege at coles...horse food. All crap from one source.

I despise Coles and Woolworths. With a passion.
Anonymous Coward
12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
I retract my comments then about your integrity CA from perth
DEATH TO MACCAS and hungry jacks!
Long live the revolution
want2knowy  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
Aussie,read the article from Alternet. There is some verbage about Wally´s connection with the Red Army. (first Wally, and now Unocal. China wants our ass real bad)

[link to www.godlikeproductions.com]
Concerned Aussie from Perth  (OP)

12/08/2005 10:14 AM
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Re: Wal-Mart Collapses U.S. Cities and Towns...posted in memory of recent tragic death.
9742...(-:

wanttoknowy, will check it out. Thanks.





GLP