The Telegram (St. John's)

Amazon ups wages, says it will advocate better pay

-

Amazon, which has faced political and economic pressure to raise pay for thousands of employees, is boosting its minimum wage for all U.S. workers to $15 per hour starting next month.

The wage hike will benefit more than 350,000 workers, which includes full-time, parttime, temporary and seasonal positions. Employees at Whole Foods, which Amazon now owns, will get the same pay hike. Amazon’s hourly operations and customer service employees, some who already make $15 per hour, will also see a wage increase, the Seattle company said.

Amazon, with more than 575,000 employees globally, took it a step further Tuesday, saying that it would become an advocate for better pay everywhere.

A public policy team employed by Amazon will begin pushing for an increase in the U.S. federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour.

“We intend to advocate for a minimum wage increase that will have a profound impact on the lives of tens of millions of people and families across this country,” Jay Carney, senior vice-president of Amazon global corporate affairs, said in a statement.

Amazon has faced criticism

from labour rights groups and others over pay and working conditions at its warehouses. One of its harshest critics is U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders. His Twitter account, which has nearly 9 million followers, frequently points out the disparity between Amazon’s median employee pay and the vast fortune of CEO Jeff Bezos.

Pay for workers at Amazon can vary by location. Starting pay is $10 an hour at a warehouse in Austin, Texas, and $13.50 an hour in Robbinsvil­le, New Jersey. The median pay for an Amazon employee last year was $28,446 worldwide, according to government filings, which includes full-time, parttime and temporary workers.

In two decades the company expanded far beyond its bookseller beginnings, combining its world-spanning retail operation with less flashy but very profitable advertisin­g and cloud computing businesses. Last month it became the second publicly traded company to be worth $1 trillion, hot on the heels of Apple.

Despite its domination, it shares one potential hurdle that is growing higher for almost all employers big and small: a tightening labour market.

The last hiring figures from the U.S. Commerce Department showed that in August, the pace of hiring rose again and wages grew at their fastest pace in nine years.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Jamie Rubinstein, left, first in a line of applicants, talks with Amazon worker Vanessa Chandler as he begins the recruitmen­t process at a job fair at an Amazon fulfillmen­t center in Kent, Wash in 2017.
AP PHOTO Jamie Rubinstein, left, first in a line of applicants, talks with Amazon worker Vanessa Chandler as he begins the recruitmen­t process at a job fair at an Amazon fulfillmen­t center in Kent, Wash in 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada