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One of the highest compliments paid to me by a former student was from a young woman in the first statistics class I ever taught (non-AP)….she said that she “would never read the newspaper the same way again.” It is through this lens that I would like to present some of the data behind the Walmart headlines last week. Walmart announced that it increase the minimum wage it pays to $11 per hour, and give some bonuses too, as a way of sharing some of the benefits it will receive from the corporate tax rate cut from 35% to 21% with its employees.
I have pulled as much information as I could glean from the articles on Walmart last week and list the facts below. You can draw your own conclusions about the motivation for Walmart’s moves. Better yet, present the data to your students and let them debate the issue!
Let’s add some context to these numbers. The Washington Post included this calculation about what working full-time at Walmart looks like:
“Eleven dollars an hour equals about $19,000 a year for 34-hour weeks, which Walmart considers full time. That is below the national poverty line for a family of three.”
And Politico added this fact about the sheer scope/reach of the Walmart employee base:
First, Walmart raised starting pay to $11 an hour for front-line employees. Today, 600,000 hourly Walmart employees—60 percent—work in states where the minimum wage is less than $8 an hour. That’s Walmart setting base pay almost 40 percent above the minimum in places like Texas, Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina and Missouri.
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