What I can't understand is why people who think of themselves as conservatives 
are in favor of this stuff. 

February 24, 2005
The Conservative Case Against Wal-Mart
Hugh Hewitt praises a tough-minded speech by Wal-Mart's CEO and inveighs 
against Wal-Mart's critics:

Resistance to WalMart opening new stores always amazes me. Really. Good jobs at 
good wages, many of them entry-level jobs with training and advancement 
possibilities. Excellent advantages for consumers, benefits for employees, and 
neighborhood redevelopment.

But the media loves to hate the giant retailer, and local small businesses 
always put up a predictable cry. When WalMart is blocked, you never hear about 
the folks who didn't get jobs or the insurance plans that don't get enrollees. 
The small stores are happy, but the next time an objection is raised, I'd love 
to see a report on the wages and benefits paid to employees of such mom and pop 
operations. There will be some exceptions, but the average worker who is not an 
owner would be better off at the WalMart. 

I respect Hugh a lot, but on this one I think there's a plausible 
counter-argument to be made; indeed, that one can make a plausible conservative 
case against Wal-Mart.

First, the data show that entry of a Wal-Mart store into a community has only a 
very small positive impact on county-level employment. According to a study by 
Missouri economist Emek Basker, "in the first year after entry, retail 
employment in the county increases by approximately 100 jobs; this figure 
declines by half over the next five years as small and medium-sized retail 
establishments close. Wholesale employment declines by approximately 20 jobs 
over five years." (3) Note that the "typical Wal-Mart store employs 150-350 
workers. These results suggest that employment increases by less than the full 
amount of Wal-Mart’s hiring, even before allowing other firms time to fully 
adjust to Wal-Mart’s entry." (14)

Second, the data also show that Wal-Mart's entry into a community has a 
downward impact on overall retail prices of certain core consumer commodities. 
(Link)

Third, objective data on the impact of Wal-Mart's entry into a community on 
prevailing wages is difficult to find, but one suspects it is not positive. 
(Timothy Noah points out that Wal-Mart's CEO distorted Wal-Mart's wage picture 
in his speech by using average rather than median salaries.)

Fourth, entry of Wal-Mart typically results in exit by at least some local 
businesses, as suggested by the fact that the increase in employment is smaller 
than the number of positions Wal-Mart fills.

Fifth, even if the subsidies given Wal-Mart by many local communities to 
encourage opening a store are not as large as Wal-Mart's critics claim, does 
anyone seriously doubt that Wal-Mart often gets breaks on things like zoning, 
property or sales taxes, and other regulatory issues that small business 
competitors don't receive? 

So opening a Wal-Mart has a small positive effect on consumer prices and 
employment for the community. The latter effect dissipates over time as 
Wal-Mart drives competitors out of business or, at least, the area. In 
addition, many of these employees appear to be part-time, according to Basker's 
study, who likely get smaller benefits and opportunity for advancement than 
full-timers. (Timothy Noah also pointed out that Wal-Mart overstates the number 
of full-time employees by counting as full-time anybody who works more than 34 
hours a week.)

But even if Hugh is right that "the average worker who is not an owner would be 
better off at the WalMart," what about those owners?

In his article, Thwarting the Killing of the Corporation: Limited Liability, 
Democracy, and Economics, 87 Nw. U. L. Rev. 148 (1992) (Westlaw sub. req'd), 
law professor Stephen Presser writes eloquently about the role small business 
plays in our democracy. Presser explains that corporations were endowed with 
limited liability precisely so as to encourage the growth of small business:

The popular democratic justification for limited liability is rarely observed 
by modern scholars. Nevertheless, it appears that to the nineteenth-century 
legislators in states such as New York, who mandated limited liability for 
corporations' shareholders, the imposition of limited liability was perceived 
as a means of encouraging the small-scale entrepreneur, and of keeping entry 
into business markets competitive and democratic. Without limitations on 
individual shareholder liability, it was believed, only the very wealthiest 
men, industrial titans such as New York's John Jacob Astor, could possess the 
privilege of investing in corporations. Without the contributions of investors 
of moderate means, it was felt, the kind of economic progress states like New 
York needed would not be achieved.

The author of the most comprehensive study of New York legislative policy 
toward corporations in the nineteenth century concluded that New York's policy 
of limited liability, and its policy of encouraging incorporation by persons of 
modest means "facilitated the growth of a viable urban democracy by allowing a 
wide participation in businesses that could most advantageously be organized as 
corporations." "More importantly," he suggested, New York's general 
incorporation statutes "helped equalize the opportunities to get rich. The 
passage of general incorporation laws for business corporations was the 
economic aspect of the political and social forces that democratized the United 
States during the Age of Jackson, 1825-1855."

Note carefully this line: the "policy of encouraging incorporation by persons 
of modest means 'facilitated the growth of a viable urban democracy by allowing 
a wide participation in businesses that could most advantageously be organized 
as corporations.'" By trampling small businesses underfoot, through its mix of 
volume pricing and subsidies, Wal-Mart and its ilk undermine the possibility of 
"wide participation in businesses." Prospective entrepreneurs are thus pushed 
out of fields like retail.

Of course, maybe Wal-Mart makes up for that by buying products from small 
entrepreneurs in places like China. But do we really want to encourage our 
nation’s most likely future superpower rival to further build up its economy 
with massive trade deficits?

Finally, there is an aesthetic/humanistic argument to be made. I come back 
here, as I do so often, to Russell Kirk's description of his beloved Detroit:

All my life I have known the city of Detroit, called-during World War II "the 
arsenal of democracy." ... In the shocking decay of that great city nowadays, 
we behold the consequences of an inhumane economy-bent upon maximum productive 
efficiency, but heedless of personal order and public order. Henry Ford's 
assembly-line methods had much to do with the impersonality and monotony of 
Detroit's economic development; and so, in some degree, did Ford's 
concentration of his whole productive apparatus at the Rouge Plant; but of 
course Henry Ford had no notion, in the earlier years of his operation, of what 
might be the personal and social effects of his highly successful industrial 
establishment; nor did the other automobile manufacturers of Detroit. Indeed, 
they seem still to be ignorant of such unhappy consequences, or else 
indifferent to the consequences, so long as profits continue to be made. 
Consider the wiping out of Poletown through the unholy alliance of industrial, 
municipal, and ecclesiastical power structures, regardless of the rights and 
the wishes of Poletown's inhabitants-all to build on the site of Poletown a new 
industrial complex, which already, far from supplying the promised increase in 
tax revenues for Detroit, is involved in grave difficulties. 

Outside the most heavily urbanized areas, Wal-Mart typically builds on the edge 
of town, putting up a huge (and butt-ugly) big box building surrounded by acres 
of bare concrete parking lots. There are few sights in the American scene less 
attractive or appealing to the eye.

Kirk observed that "Detroit, during my own lifetime, has produced tremendous 
wealth in goods and services. But it has been a social failure. And so have 
nearly all of America's other major cities." I put it to you that Wal-Mart 
contributed to moving those failures into small town America by shuttering 
local business and creating huge barriers to entrepreneurial entry into fields 
traditionally the province of local small business men and women.

Being a conservative is supposed to be about things like tradition, community, 
and, yes, aesthetics. If I'm right about that, it's hard to see why a 
conservative should regard Wal-Mart as a societal force for good even if Hugh's 
right about the job story.

So what do we do? Well, we must strike a balance between respect for private 
property rights (see my Kelo post) and our other values. How? On the one hand, 
government should not legislate against Wal-Mart and its ilk. On the other 
hand, government should not subsidize Wal-Mart either through zoning or tax 
breaks. Wal-Mart’s a big boy, so to speak, who can take care of itself. We 
ought to let it compete in a free market. And those of us with a bully pulpit 
out to use it to encourage Wal-Mart to become a better neighbor and citizen.

Update: I'm not sure how Hugh figures that I have gone "statist on us." But I'm 
supposed to be on his radio show at 5:20 PM today (Pacific time) to discuss it.

http://www.professorbainbridge.com/2005/02/walmart_a_devil.html

>It did that in my home town...Only difference is my town buckled not once
>but twice...Wal-mart moved in, incentives ran out they decided they wanted a
>super wal-mart. They  fished for incentives and got them again...Now we have
>a shopping center completely dieing thanks to Wal-mart moving acrossed town.
>Awesome job walmart awesome job.
>
>Adam
>
>On 1/15/06, Nick McClure <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>

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