Boston Herald

Amazon ships U.S. a delivery revolution

- By Rich Lowry Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

It’s been a terrible year for the American worker, with a notable bright spot courtesy of one of the tech firms in the crosshairs of regulators and lawmakers.

If someone had said early in 2020, “A company is going to hire hundreds of thousands of non-college-educated workers during the pandemic at well above the minimum wage,” you’d think there’d be huzzahs all around.

That’s what the online retailer Amazon has done, but it still gets brickbats for how it pays and treats its workers. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said the other day that Amazon jobs are a “scam.”

If so, a swath of the American workforce is falling for the grift. Since July, the online retailer has hired 350,000 workers, and now employs 1.2 million people globally. This is a historic hiring binge. According to The New York Times, “the closest comparison­s are the hiring that entire industries carried out in wartime, such as shipbuildi­ng during the early years of World War II.”

On top of this, the company provides work for roughly half a million truck drivers.

Amazon has been buoyed by the surge of online retail during the pandemic, which has accelerate­d and entrenched e-commerce. Companies like Walmart and Target have benefited, too, but Amazon leads the pack.

It overwhelmi­ngly hires high school graduates. It doesn’t ask for a resume, gives its workers about a day of training, and then puts them on the job in its fulfillmen­t centers.

The difficulty of the work shouldn’t be underestim­ated — it is taxing, repetitive and so highly regimented that it would make the legendary apostle of industrial efficiency Frederick Winslow Taylor blush.

Yet, we’ve long complained about losing assembly line jobs for non-college-educated workers. Amazon is hiring people for what is the 21st-century equivalent of such jobs, which were — despite the nostalgia for them — also tough and physically demanding.

It can’t be that office work is now the only acceptable form of employment in America.

Amazon began paying its workers $15 an hour in 2018. If that rate rings a bell, it’s the number for the federal minimum wage that Sen. Bernie Sanders and AOC have long been lobbying for, to little effect (it remains $7.25 an hour).

The evidence is that when a behemoth like Amazon pays more, it prompts competitor­s to follow suit.

It’s hard to review what Amazon has done over the last year and consider it the work of a corporate monster.

It’s been offering signing bonuses of up to $3,000, and hiring in places in the country where no one else is.

According to the research of Michael Mandel at the center-left Progressiv­e Policy Institute, Amazon fulfillmen­t center jobs pay 31% more than retail jobs at brick-andmortar stores, where pay has basically been stagnant for three decades.

Mandel points out that it’s wrong to simplistic­ally think of Amazon and other e-commerce outfits as replacing brick-and-mortar stores.

What they are really replacing is the labor that consumers undertake on their own to shop for goods — driving to a store, walking up and down the aisles, making the selection, loading it and taking it home. Someone making a purchase through Amazon essentiall­y hires a network of workers to do all of that for him.

By all means, jawbone the company to treat workers better, but don’t lose sight of the scale of its achievemen­t — and how many Americans are employed because of it.

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