What does the drama in
Washington over the “fiscal cliff” have to do with strikes and work
stoppages among America’s lowest-paid workers at Walmart, McDonald’s,
Burger King, and Domino’s Pizza?
Everything.
Jobs are slowly returning to America, but most of them pay lousy
wages and low if non-existent benefits. The Bureau of Labor Statistics
estimates that seven out of 10 growth occupations over the next decade
will be low-wage — like serving customers at big-box retailers and
fast-food chains. That’s why the median wage keeps dropping, especially
for the 80 percent of the workforce that’s paid by the hour.
It’s also part of the reason why the percent
of Americans living below the poverty line has been increasing even as
the economy has started to recover — from 12.3 percent in 2006 to 15
percent in 2011. More than 46 million Americans now live below the
poverty line.
Many of them have jobs. The problem is these jobs just don’t pay enough to lift their families out of poverty.
So, encouraged by the economic recovery and perhaps also by the election returns, low-wage workers have started to organize.
Yesterday in New York hundreds of workers at dozens
of fast-food chain stores went on strike, demanding a raise to
$15-an-hour from their current pay of $8 to $10 an hour (the median
hourly wage for food service and prep workers in New York is $8.90 an
hour).
Last week, Walmart workers staged demonstrations and walkouts at
thousands of Walmart stores, also demanding better pay. The average
Walmart employee earns $8.81 an hour. A third of Walmart’s employees
work less than 28 hours per week and don’t qualify for benefits.
These workers are not teenagers. Most have to support their families.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median age of
fast-food workers is over 28; and women, who comprise two-thirds of the
industry, are over 32. The median age of big-box retail workers is over
30.
Organizing makes economic sense.
Unlike industrial jobs, these can’t be outsourced abroad. Nor are
they likely to be replaced by automated machinery and computers. The
service these workers provide is personal and direct: Someone has to be
on hand to help customers and dole out the burgers.
And any wage gains they receive aren’t likely to be passed on to
consumers in higher prices because big-box retailers and fast-food
chains have to compete intensely for consumers. They have no choice but
to keep their prices low.
That means wage gains are likely to come out of profits – which, in
turn, would affect the return to shareholders and the total compensation
of top executives.
That wouldn’t be such a bad thing.
According to a recent report
by the National Employment Law Project, most low-wage workers are
employed by large corporations that have been enjoying healthy profits.
Three-quarters of these employers (the fifty biggest employers of
low-wage workers) are raking in higher revenues now than they did before
the recession.
McDonald’s — bellwether for the fast-food
industry — posted strong results during the recession by attracting
cash-strapped customers, and its sales have continued to rise.
Its CEO, Jim Skinner, got $8.8 million last
year. In addition to annual bonuses, McDonald’s also gives its
executives a long-term bonus once every three years; Skinner received an
$8.3 million long-term bonus in 2009 and is due for another this year.
The value of Skinner’s other perks — including personal use of the
company aircraft, physical exams and security — rose 19% to $752,000.
Yum!Brands, which operates and licenses Taco
Bell, KFC, and Pizza Hut, has also done wonderfully well. Its CEO, David
Novak, received $29.67 million in total compensation last year, placing
him number 23 on Forbes’ list of highest paid chief executives.
Walmart – the trendsetter for big-box retailers – is also doing well. And it pays its executives handsomely. The total compensation for Walmart’s CEO, Michael Duke, was $18.7 million last year – putting him number 82 on
Forbes’ list.
The wealth of the Walton family – which still owns
the lion’s share of Walmart stock — now exceeds the wealth of the bottom
40 percent of American families combined, according to an
analysis by the Economic Policy Institute.
Last week, Walmart announced
that the next Wal-Mart dividend will be issued December 27 instead of
January 2, after the Bush tax cut for dividends expires — thereby saving
the Walmart family as much as $180 million. (According to the online
weekly “Too Much,” this $180 million would be enough to give 72,000 Wal-Mart workers now making $8 an hour a 20 percent annual pay hike. That hike would still leave those workers making under the poverty line for a family of three.)
America is becoming more unequal by the day. So wouldn’t it be
sensible to encourage unionization at fast-food and big-box retailers?
Yes, but here’s the problem.
The unemployment rate among people with just a high school degree –
which describes most (but not all) fast-food and big-box retail workers –
is still in the stratosphere. The Bureau of Labor Statistics puts it at
12.2 percent, and that’s conservative estimate. It was 7.7 percent at
the start of 2008.
High unemployment makes it much harder to organize a union because
workers are even more fearful than usual of losing their jobs. Eight
dollars an hour is better than no dollars an hour. And employers at
big-box and fast-food chains have not been reluctant to give the boot to
employees associated with attempts to organize for higher wages.
Meanwhile, only half of the people who lose their jobs qualify for
unemployment insurance these days. Retail workers in big-boxes and
fast-food chains rarely qualify because they haven’t been on the job
long enough or are there only part-time. This makes the risk of job loss
even greater.
Which brings us back to what’s happening in Washington.
Washington’s obsession with deficit reduction makes it all the more
likely these workers will face continuing high unemployment – even
higher if the nation succumbs to deficit hysteria. That’s because
cutting government spending reduces overall demand, which hits low-wage
workers hardest. They and their families are the biggest casualties of
austerity economics.
And if the spending cuts Washington is contemplating fall on low-wage
workers whose families are under the poverty line – reducing not only
the availability of unemployment insurance but also food stamps, housing
assistance, infant and child nutrition, child health care, and Medicaid
– it will be even worse. (It’s worth recalling, in this regard, that 62
percent of the cuts in the Republican budget engineered by Paul Ryan
fell on America’s poor.)
By contrast, low levels of unemployment invite wage gains and make it
easier to organize unions. The last time America’s low-wage workers got
a real raise (apart from the last hike in the minimum wage) was the
late 1990s when unemployment dropped to 4 percent nationally –
compelling employers to raise wages in order to recruit and retain them,
and prompting a round of labor organizing.
That’s one reason why job growth must be the nation’s number one priority. Not deficit reduction.
Yet neither side in the current “fiscal cliff” negotiations is
talking about America’s low-wage workers. They’re invisible in official
Washington.
Not only are they unorganized for the purpose of getting a larger
share of the profits at Walmart, McDonalds, and other giant firms,
they’re also unorganized for the purpose of being heard in our nation’s
capital. There’s no national association of low-wage workers. They don’t
contribute much to political campaigns. They have no Super-PAC. They
don’t have Washington lobbyists.
But if this nation is to reverse the scourge of widening inequality,
Washington needs to start paying attention to them. And the rest of us
should do everything we can to pressure Washington
and big-box retailers and fast-food chains to raise their pay.
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