How
Taxpayers Subsidize Union Avoidance by Wal-Mart and Nissan
By
Phil Mattera in the Dirtdiggers Digest
Most
Americans have been made to believe that they have no stake in private sector
labor issues. Unions, we are told, are irrelevant to the working life of the vast
majority of the population, whose economic fate is supposedly being determined
solely by their employers or by individual skills in maneuvering through the
labor market.
This
narrative, however, is being challenged by organizing campaigns that are taking
on two giant corporations – Wal-Mart and Nissan – and showing that collective
action is not defunct. And two reports related to the campaigns show that not
only the workers involved, but also taxpayers in general, have a stake in their
outcome.
A
new wave of non-traditional organizing by Making Change at Walmart and OUR Walmart has revived the prospects for
change at the giant retailer. Strikes have become a frequent occurrence at
Wal-Mart stores in recent weeks, and large numbers of Wal-Mart workers and
their supporters have been converging on Bentonville, Arkansas to make their
voices heard at the company’s annual meeting.
A
recent report by
the Democratic staff of the U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce
is a reminder that taxpayers are put in a position of subsidizing the low wages
and poor benefits that the Wal-Mart campaigners are protesting.
The study,
which updates a 2004 report by the committee, reviews the hidden taxpayer costs
stemming from the fact that many Wal-Mart workers have no choice but to use
social safety net programs—such as Medicaid, Section 8 Housing, food stamps and
the Earned Income Tax Credit—that were designed for individuals not in the
labor force or those working for small companies that failed to provide decent
compensation, not a leviathan with $17 billion in annual profits.
The
Democratic staff report estimates that today the workers in a typical Wal-Mart
Supercenter (Wisconsin is used as the example) make use of programs that cost
taxpayers at least $904,542 a year and possibly as much as $1.7 million. Since
Wal-Mart has more than 3,000 Supercenters in the U.S., plus hundreds of other
types of stores, those costs run into the billions.
Nissan
has been following in Wal-Mart’s footsteps in Mississippi, where it opened a
large assembly plant a decade ago. The plant brought several thousand direct
jobs to the state, but the problem is that many of the jobs are substandard.
The company makes extensive use of temps, who are currently paid only about $12
an hour.
In
response to the use of temps as well as issues concerning the conditions faced
by regular employees, Nissan workers have been organizing themselves with the
help of the United Auto Workers. Rather than accepting labor representation, as
it does in numerous other countries, Nissan is seeking to intimidate workers
using the usual toolbox of union avoidance techniques such as threats and
bombarding workers with anti-union propaganda. The workers, however, have
been bolstered by strong community support from groups such as the Mississippi Alliance for Fairness at Nissan.
My
colleagues and I at Good Jobs First recently issued a report commissioned by the
UAW documenting the extent to which Nissan has enjoyed lavish tax breaks and
other financial assistance from state and local government agencies.
We found
that the subsidies, which were originally estimated at around $300 million when
the company first came to the state in 2000, have mushroomed to the point that
they could be worth some $1.3 billion. That works out to some $290,000 per job.
Noting the over-dependence on temps, we state that Mississippi taxpayers are
paying “premium amounts for jobs that in many cases are far from premium.”
Although
it was outside the scope of our report, it is clear that the Nissan temps, like
the Wal-Mart workers, are also generating hidden taxpayer costs through their
use of safety net programs. And we have previously documented that
Wal-Mart frequently gets the kind of economic development subsidies Nissan is
enjoying in Mississippi.
Whether
through hidden taxpayer costs or job subsidies, the public is frequently put in
the position of aiding companies like Wal-Mart and Nissan that disregard labor
rights while failing to pay their fair share of the cost of government. Perhaps
the interests of taxpayers and workers are not so different after all.