Facts About Wal-Mart And Local Economies
Background on
Wal-Mart’s Exploding Growth Affecting America’s Towns
·
Last Year
Wal-Mart Opened 312 Stores in the
· Wal-Mart CFO Shoewe: 950 New Supercenters Have Already Been Planned Internally. “[T]he bottom line is there is a tremendous opportunity, something just under 4000 Supercenters that can be added to what we already have here, and 950 of those have already gone through the internal process -- internal real estate process that is just awesome.” [Wal-Mart CFO Tom Schoewe, Remarks at the Wal-Mart Shareholders' Meeting Presentation to Analysts, 6/3/05]
Wal-Mart Eliminates
Business from Local Shops when it Enters a Community
·
Wal-Mart
Effect on Grocery Markets: Most People In The
·
Wal-Mart
Effect on Specialty Stores: Drug
stores, sporting goods stores, book stores, gift shops, are examples of
specialty stores. A study of
·
Wal-Mart
Effect on Apparel Sales: The study of
Wal-Mart Builds
Stores with Public Subsidies, Takes Away Funds for Local Spending
Wal-Mart has Received Over $1 billion in Public
Subsidies. Despite $10 billion in
profit in 2004 alone, Wal-Mart relies on state and local governments to provide
tax breaks and to pay for roads and utility connections at many of its new
stores and distribution centers. A May 2004 report by Good Jobs First
documented that Wal-Mart has received more than $1 billion from at least 244 taxpayer-funded subsidies. [Mattera and Purinton, Good Jobs First, “Shopping
for Subsidies,” May 2004, http://www.goodjobsfirst.org/pdf/wmtstudy.pdf]
Examples of Wal-Mart Subsidies. The public money Wal-Mart receives comes in the following forms: Free or reduced price land, Tax Increment Finance (TIF) districts, Infrastructure assistance, Property tax breaks, State corporate income tax credits, Sales tax rebates, Tax-exempt bond financing, Enterprise Zone status, Job training/recruiting funds, General grants. [CITE]
Other Uses for Public
Funds Given to Wal-Mart:
·
Property
taxes are usually used by municipal governments for things like schools,
road repair, garbage pickup, and other such services [Legal Information Institute,
·
Bond
money: companies seek and receive bond money because the interest rate is
very favorable, as the loan is guaranteed by a government agency. This is
taxpayer money they’re borrowing.