Ten Companies Paying Americans the Least

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
11-15-2013

http://247wallst.com/special-report/2013/11/15/ten-companies-paying-americans-the-least/

Ten Companies Paying Americans the Least

By Michael B. Sauter, Thomas C. Frohlich and Alexander E.M. Hess


1. Walmart
> U.S. workforce: 1.4 million
> CEO compensation: $20.7 million
> Revenue: $469 billion
> Net income: $17.0 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 4,759

Hourly wages for sales associates are less than $9.00

Walmart recently announced it would launch Black Friday sales at 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day.
Critics of Walmart see this as adding insult to injury — forcing retail workers who already earn low wages to cut holidays short.

2. McDonald’s
> U.S. workforce: 739,055
> CEO compensation: $13.8 million
> Revenue: $27.6 billion
> Net income: $5.5 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 14,157

Between 2008 and 2012, sales and profit margins at McDonald’s have increased.

Despite the company’s growth, employees are still hurting.

McDonald’s encourages employees to enroll in food stamps and welfare programs.

3. Target
> U.S. workforce: 361,000
> CEO compensation: $20.6 million
> Revenue: $73.3 billion
> Net income: $3.0 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 1,778

In response to Target opening on Thursday, in advance of Black Friday, Target workers drafted a petition last year to “save Thanksgiving.”
More than 300,000 people signed the petition.

4. Kroger
> U.S. workforce: 343,000
> CEO compensation: $11.1 million
> Revenue: $96.8 billion
> Net income: $1.5 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 2,418

5. Yum! Brands
> U.S. workforce: 694,712 (est.)
> CEO compensation: $14.2 million
> Revenue: $13.6 billion
> Net income: $1.6 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 18,069

Brands has continued to expand, opening more than five new restaurants a day outside the United States in 2012.
However many American workers have expressed frustration that the company’s success has not led to an increase in their pay.
This summer, fast-food workers at Yum! Brands and other fast-food chains staged protests across the country, demanding higher wages.

6. Sears Holdings
> U.S. workforce: 246,000
> CEO compensation: $1.3 million (Louis D’Ambrosio, former CEO)
> Revenue: $39.9 billion
> Net income: -$930 million
> No. of U.S. stores: 2,073

Hourly wages were less than $8.00. However, Sears Holdings may not have the necessary ability to increase its employees’ pay.
Sales have slipped in the past few years, plunging from $47.8 billion in fiscal 2008 to less than $40 billion in the most recent year.
The company has also failed to post an operating profit in either of the past two full fiscal years.

7. Darden Restaurants
> U.S. workforce: 203,389 (est.)
> CEO compensation: $6.4 million
> Revenue: $8.6 billion
> Net income: $412 million
> No. of U.S. stores: 2,105

The parent company of chains such as Olive Garden and Red Lobster, rose from just $7.2 billion in 2009 to $8.6 billion in fiscal 2013.

Instead of raising wages, the company’s funds have been used effectively “to fund growth concepts and enhance total shareholder returns.
Yet the results have not been enough for investors, some of whom have pushed for the company to split and continue to cut costs faster.

8. Macy’s
> U.S. workforce: 175,700
> CEO compensation: $13.8 million
> Revenue: $27.7 billion
> Net income: $1.3 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 844

9. TJX Companies
> U.S. workforce: 138,211 (est.)
> CEO compensation: $21.8 million
> Revenue: $25.9 billion
> Net income: $1.9 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 2,355

The TJX Companies Inc. operates Marshalls, TJ Maxx and HomeGoods in the United States.
They buy unsold inventory from manufacturers and other retailers and resell it at a discount.
TJX’s sales have grown in the past four consecutive fiscal years as the retailer also boosted its operating profit margin.
Despite the company’s success, sales associates at its stores earn less than $8 an hour.

10. Starbucks
> U.S. workforce: 120,000
> CEO compensation: $28.9 million
> Revenue: $13.3 billion
> Net income: $1.4 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 5,415/7,049/13,493

In an interview with CNBC in March, Schultz cautiously supported a minimum wage hike.
Baristas at Starbucks are paid an average of less than $9 an hour. Schultz has downplayed the relevance of these figures.
The CEO has become a billionaire by turning Starbucks from a small coffee retailer into one of the world’s most famous brands.
Schultz is often viewed as a progressive executive, due to his support of gay marriage and his request that customers not bring guns into Starbucks locations.

==============================================================================


11-19-2013

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/walmarts-employee-food-drive-reveals-120012647.html

Wal-Mart's Employee Food Drive Reveals What's Wrong With America

By Henry Blodget


Yesterday, it was revealed that employees at a Cleveland Wal-Mart are holding a holiday food drive for other Wal-Mart employees.


This situation says everything about what's wrong with the U.S. economy right now.


Wal-Mart is one of the richest companies in the world.


Wal-Mart has a market value of $260 billion and made $17 billion in profit last year.


But Wal-Mart does not pay its employees enough to buy food for the holidays.

America's corporations and investors have never had it better. The stock market is setting new highs, and corporate profits and profit margins are higher than they have ever been. Average Americans, meanwhile, have rarely had it worse. Wages as a percent of the economy are at an all-time low, and fewer people are working as a percent of the population than at any time in the past 30 years.

In a healthy economy at healthy companies, customers should get good products and prices, shareholders should get a good return, and employees should earn a good living.


But, right now in America, customers are getting good products and prices, shareholders are getting absolutely fantastic returns, and employees are getting screwed.

Corporate profit margins are at an all-time high. Companies are making more per dollar of sales than they ever have before. (And some people are still saying that companies are suffering from "too much regulation" and "too many taxes."

In short, our current "profit maximization" philosophy is creating a country of a few million overlords and 300+ million serfs.


That's not what has made America a great country. It's also not what most people think America is supposed to be about.

http://www.businessinsider.com/wealth-and-income-inequality-in-america-2013-4

AMERICA TODAY: 3 Million Overlords And 300 Million Serfs


One of the most disturbing trends in this country is the rise of extreme wealth and income inequality.

America is rapidly becoming a country of a few million overlords and three hundred million serfs.

The best way to fix inequality is not to tax most of the overlords' money and give it to the serfs. That just inflames "class warfare" and gets people yelling about "socialism."


The best way to fix inequality is to persuade the overlords that it is in their best interests to share more of their wealth by paying their employees more for their hard work.

 
Last edited:

Jmman

Diamond Member
Dec 17, 1999
5,302
0
76
Hmmm, and how much experience, education, or training do you need to work at the companies above? Yep, zilch. If you start at the bottom of the ladder, you can't expect to get paid like someone with a PHD......
 

nageov3t

Lifer
Feb 18, 2004
42,808
83
91
breaking news: jobs that require no skill and that you can train anyone off the street to do semi-competently in an afternoon don't pay well.

many of these jobs I'd imagine are also temporary stepping stones along a career (eg: part-time jobs during high school/college)
 

z1ggy

Lifer
May 17, 2008
10,010
66
91
Yeah I'm not too too bothered by this. Yes our wages are low compared to other countries. But I'm more bothered by the $1T in student debt we possess as a country and the fact loans are being paid back late is at an all time high. The middle class is slowly dissappearing...
 

glenn1

Lifer
Sep 6, 2000
25,383
1,013
126
Hmmm, and how much experience, education, or training do you need to work at the companies above? Yep, zilch. If you start at the bottom of the ladder, you can't expect to get paid like someone with a PHD......

Hush, the fault can never be with the potential worker and what value he brings to the table for an employer. It's always, always, the fault of the company for being greedy and refusing to pay more.

Perhaps in response companies should put together a list of the ten progressive policies making prices more expensive for the poor. And sometimes for no reason or benefit to them (GMO food labeling being a recent example).
 

ThinClient

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2013
3,977
4
0
11-15-2013

http://247wallst.com/special-report/2013/11/15/ten-companies-paying-americans-the-least/

Ten Companies Paying Americans the Least

By Michael B. Sauter, Thomas C. Frohlich and Alexander E.M. Hess


1. Walmart
> U.S. workforce: 1.4 million
> CEO compensation: $20.7 million
> Revenue: $469 billion
> Net income: $17.0 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 4,759

Hourly wages for sales associates are less than $9.00

Walmart recently announced it would launch Black Friday sales at 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day.
Critics of Walmart see this as adding insult to injury — forcing retail workers who already earn low wages to cut holidays short.

Shut the fuck up you tinfoil hat wearing tard.

I have family who work for Walmart and I know for a fact that this data is wrong.

Edit: Aren't you the same mental midget who made claims about milk and gas costing a price that they've never been close to reaching or something? I've seen other people rag on you for being the local village idiot. You need to check your sources because this information is very easily falsifiable.
 

ThinClient

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2013
3,977
4
0
What is sadder than the article is the Rich Republican P&N posters that support these Executives and Corporations.

oh look, political partisanship

why am I not surprised

You're too busy slinging mud to check the validity of the mud simply because you have that old tired political agenda of blaming the other guy.
 

Svnla

Lifer
Nov 10, 2003
17,986
1,388
126
From the article:

Schultz cautiously supported a minimum wage hike.

Baristas at Starbucks are paid an average of less than $9 an hour. Schultz has downplayed the relevance of these figures.
The CEO has become a billionaire by turning Starbucks from a small coffee retailer into one of the world’s most famous brands.

Schultz is often viewed as a progressive executive,

LOL @ the hypocrisy and double standard of "progressive". Do as I say and not as I do, eh?
 

rudder

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
19,441
86
91
1. Walmart

Walmart recently announced it would launch Black Friday sales at 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day.
Critics of Walmart see this as adding insult to injury — forcing retail workers who already earn low wages to cut the holiday short.

3. Target


In response to Target opening on Thursday, in advance of Black Friday, Target workers drafted a petition last year to “save Thanksgiving.”
More than 300,000 people signed the petition.



.

I hope you don't need electricity on thanksgiving or know someone who has to goto the hospital on thanksgiving. I hope you don't have any relatives traveling. Will you enjoy those football games on turkey day?

A lot of people have to work on Thanksgiving.
 

nageov3t

Lifer
Feb 18, 2004
42,808
83
91
I hope you don't need electricity on thanksgiving or know someone who has to goto the hospital on thanksgiving. I hope you don't have any relatives traveling. Will you enjoy those football games on turkey day?

A lot of people have to work on Thanksgiving.

:thumbsup:

unless they're not getting overtime/holiday pay, I don't get the outrage.

I roll my eyes when I read about the "omg, no one should have to work on Turkey Day!!!11!" cries. I'm sure if my web hosting company shut down for every holiday, they'd be the first ones calling in to complain when they couldn't upload their cat pictures to the interwebs.

I actually volunteered to work on Thanksgiving... extra pay and it's usually a pretty slow day. I'll get out of work just late enough to miss most of the family drama, and show up to dinner just in time to eat dessert and take a plate of leftovers to-go.
 
Last edited:

ThinClient

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2013
3,977
4
0
I hope you don't need electricity on thanksgiving or know someone who has to goto the hospital on thanksgiving. I hope you don't have any relatives traveling. Will you enjoy those football games on turkey day?

A lot of people have to work on Thanksgiving.

"oh dear god, the cable TV went out so we can't watch the game! Somebody call tech support!"

Rudder is right. This country doesn't function without people working at every moment. What if someone hates their family or has none and they could use the extra money from overtime and holiday pay to help pay their bills? People who claim the world should shut down on holidays are either selfish or ignorant but either way they have an incredibly narrow view of the little world that revolves around themselves.
 

Londo_Jowo

Lifer
Jan 31, 2010
17,303
158
106
londojowo.hypermart.net
I hope you don't need electricity on thanksgiving or know someone who has to goto the hospital on thanksgiving. I hope you don't have any relatives traveling. Will you enjoy those football games on turkey day?

A lot of people have to work on Thanksgiving.

No joke, I've worked on every day of the year as a Sailor and in my current job as well.
 

CPA

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2001
30,322
4
0
"oh dear god, the cable TV went out so we can't watch the game! Somebody call tech support!"

Rudder is right. This country doesn't function without people working at every moment. What if someone hates their family or has none and they could use the extra money from overtime and holiday pay to help pay their bills? People who claim the world should shut down on holidays are either selfish or ignorant but either way they have an incredibly narrow view of the little world that revolves around themselves.

Fuck, this country apparently couldn't function when "non-essential" government employees were laid off.
 

Tom

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
13,293
1
76
Of course there's always been heroic people doing necessary jobs on holidays.

The issue of stores opening on Thanksgiving is transforming a day of thanksgiving into another shopping day.

In the long run its probably not even good for the stores, eventually there'll be no significant 'start' to holiday shopping, no buying frenzy.
 

nageov3t

Lifer
Feb 18, 2004
42,808
83
91
Of course there's always been heroic people doing necessary jobs on holidays.

The issue of stores opening on Thanksgiving is transforming a day of thanksgiving into another shopping day.

In the long run its probably not even good for the stores, eventually there'll be no significant 'start' to holiday shopping, no buying frenzy.

I don't see a problem letting the market decide, though.

if the stores don't see a benefit from the extra hours, then the following years that can close up and save money.
 

ThinClient

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2013
3,977
4
0
Of course there's always been heroic people doing necessary jobs on holidays.

The issue of stores opening on Thanksgiving is transforming a day of thanksgiving into another shopping day.

In the long run its probably not even good for the stores, eventually there'll be no significant 'start' to holiday shopping, no buying frenzy.

Customer Service is always good. Loss leaders aren't good in and of themselves but stores use them anyway because there are other benefits to them. Being open and taking in less money than they pay out in hourly wages and salaries and the light bill and stuff might be a drawback, but it helps reinforce brand loyalty by making sure customers keep coming back to their store instead of going "well, I guess I have to go to another store that I've never been to" and discovering a store they might like more or who has better prices. That's only one example.

Stores being open on holidays are good things for store business, even though short-sighted folks can't see it or don't like the reasons given.

The Walmart near my house is actually going to be closed on Christmas day (but open on Thanksgiving).
 

berzerker60

Golden Member
Jul 18, 2012
1,233
1
0
Yeah I'm not too too bothered by this. Yes our wages are low compared to other countries. But I'm more bothered by the $1T in student debt we possess as a country and the fact loans are being paid back late is at an all time high. The middle class is slowly dissappearing...
Consider that these two bolded sections might be connected.

Government mandates for higher pay are, at best, a very mixed sort of blessing. But this country did and does best when its companies actually give a shit about their employees and communities, rather than seeing them as interchangeable cogs in the quest for the holy Maximized Shareholder Value and Quarterly Earnings Statement.

I think the real goal of this sort of article and discussion is less calling for a new government mandate than it is trying to make people aware of shitty working conditions that are making America weaker - every time Walmart pays its full-time employees too little to feed their families, we taxpayers are subsidizing their profits through food stamps, charity, and the long-term costs of malnourished children being less capable employees and citizens down the line (plus health care costs of malnourished children and those obese from eating fatty/salty/unhealthy dollar store foods).

Those of you convinced that welfare is an evil for creating dependence should be especially concerned about this, because it's basically teaching people at the bottom of the ladder that working full time doesn't actually get you enough money to feed your family, plus you now have (very expensive) child care costs since you can't stay home to care for them.
 

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
33,655
688
126
11-15-2013

http://247wallst.com/special-report/2013/11/15/ten-companies-paying-americans-the-least/

Ten Companies Paying Americans the Least

By Michael B. Sauter, Thomas C. Frohlich and Alexander E.M. Hess


1. Walmart
> U.S. workforce: 1.4 million
> CEO compensation: $20.7 million
> Revenue: $469 billion
> Net income: $17.0 billion
> No. of U.S. stores: 4,759

Let's cut the CEO salary to $700K and distribute the $20 million we cut to all 1.4 million employees. Guess what? Each gets $14!

P.S. Dear god, please tell me you don't seriously live in Indianapolis now.
 
Nov 8, 2012
20,842
4,785
146
Companies that require the most drone/worker ants pay their ants the least? Say it isn't so! I would have never guessed that! Who would have thought a company of 300k useless positions pays less per employee on average than a company of 20k people with engineer ants.
 

xBiffx

Diamond Member
Aug 22, 2011
8,232
2
0
Wish the government would be guilty of paying Americans the least. Too bad that would piss McOwned, as well as others, off even more.
 

Matt1970

Lifer
Mar 19, 2007
12,320
3
0
Wow, so maybe what you were taught all through school was true about needing skills to get ahead in this world were spot on.