Chattanooga Times Free Press

Amazon goes on hiring spree

- BY KAREN WEISE

Amazon has embarked on an extraordin­ary hiring binge this year, vacuuming up an average of 1,400 new workers a day and solidifyin­g its power as online shopping becomes more entrenched in the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The hiring has taken place at Amazon’s headquarte­rs in Seattle, at its hundreds of warehouses in rural communitie­s and suburbs, and in countries such as India and Italy. Amazon added 427,300 employees between January and October, pushing its workforce to more than 1.2 million people globally, up more than 50% from a year ago. Its number of workers now approaches the entire population of Dallas.

The spree has accelerate­d since the onset of the pandemic, which has turbocharg­ed Amazon’s business and made it a winner of the crisis. Starting in July, the company brought on about 350,000 employees, or 2,800 a day. Most have been warehouse workers, but Amazon has also hired software engineers and hardware specialist­s to power enterprise­s such as cloud computing, streaming entertainm­ent and devices, which have boomed in the pandemic.

The scale of hiring is even larger than it may seem because the numbers do not account for employee churn, nor do they include the 100,000 temporary workers who have been recruited for the holiday shopping season. They also do not include what internal documents show as roughly 500,000 delivery drivers, who are contractor­s and not direct Amazon employees.

Such rapid growth is unrivaled in the history of corporate America. It far outstrips the 230,000 employees that Walmart, the largest private employer with more than 2.2 million workers, added in a single year two decades ago. The closest comparison­s are the hiring that entire industries carried out in wartime, such as shipbuildi­ng during the early years of World War II or home building after soldiers returned, economists and corporate historians said.

“It’s hiring like mad,” Nelson Lichtenste­in, a labor historian at the University of California, Santa Barbara, said of Amazon. “No American company has hired so many workers so quickly.”

Even for a company that regularly sets new superlativ­es, Amazon’s employee growth stands out as a stark illustrati­on of its might. At this pace, it is on track to surpass Walmart within two years to become the world’s largest private employer.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTOS BY ROBIN RUDD ?? The huge Amazon fulfillmen­t center processes orders in the Enterprise South facility. Amazon has taken steps to combat the coronaviru­s and safeguard the health of the workers at their CHA1 fulfillmen­t center.
STAFF FILE PHOTOS BY ROBIN RUDD The huge Amazon fulfillmen­t center processes orders in the Enterprise South facility. Amazon has taken steps to combat the coronaviru­s and safeguard the health of the workers at their CHA1 fulfillmen­t center.
 ??  ?? Amazon Associate Casey Nash wears a mask as he works in the huge facility in Enterprise South.
Amazon Associate Casey Nash wears a mask as he works in the huge facility in Enterprise South.
 ??  ?? Amazon Associate Yesenia Ramirez stocks a panel that holds masks for employees.
Amazon Associate Yesenia Ramirez stocks a panel that holds masks for employees.
 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD ?? Amazon’s fulfillmen­t center in Chattanoog­a is one of a half dozen major Amazon facilities across Tennessee.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD Amazon’s fulfillmen­t center in Chattanoog­a is one of a half dozen major Amazon facilities across Tennessee.
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