Chicago Sun-Times

Amazon to add 100,000 full- time jobs in U. S. by ’ 19

Positions available across the country, with full benefits

- Brett Molina @brettmolin­a23 Contributi­ng: Elizabeth Weise in San Francisco

Amazon will create 100,000 full- time jobs in the U. S. with full benefits over the next 18 months, the tech giant announced in a statement Thursday.

The Seattle- based company says the positions are for workers across the country and across all skill and experience levels. Most of the positions will be at fulfillmen­t centers, including new ones under constructi­on in California, Florida, New Jersey and Texas. The new employees also will work in areas such as cloud technology, machine learning and advanced logistics.

“Innovation is one of our guiding principles at Amazon, and it’s created hundreds of thousands of American jobs,” CEO Jeff Bezos said in a statement. “These jobs are not just in our Seattle headquarte­rs or in Silicon Valley — they’re in our customer service network, fulfillmen­t centers and other facilities in local communitie­s throughout the country.”

The topic of new jobs in the U. S. has become a popular one as Presidente­lect Donald Trump prepares to take office. Last week, Alibaba Group Executive Chairman Jack Ma met with Trump, saying Alibaba will create 1 million jobs in the U. S. by allowing small businesses to sell goods to Chinese and Asian consumers through the tech giant’s platform.

Last month, Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son met with the presidente­lect, pledging to add 50,000 U. S. jobs and pump $ 50 billion into the economy.

Bezos and Trump had clashed leading up to last year’s presidenti­al election. Bezos criticized Trump for how he managed his campaign. In an interview last year, Trump claims Amazon has “a huge antitrust problem.”

Shortly after Trump won the election, Bezos appeared to make amends, offering his congratula­tions on Twitter. “I for one give him my most open mind and wish him great success in his service to the country,” he wrote.

Amazon has quickly ramped up its workforce over the last few years, as it pushes to open up more fulfillmen­t centers to get packages out to its customers more quickly. As part of the hiring spree, Amazon says it also will hire an additional 25,000 veterans and military spouses over the next five years. Amazon says it plans to train 10,000 active duty service members, veterans and military spouses not employed by the company in cloud computing.

Amazon has seen “tremendous” demand for its retail service as well as a fast- growing cloud business, Edward Jones analyst Josh Olson says on why the company is hungry for more workers. Amazon is increasing­ly emphasizin­g convenienc­e of its retail service, such as Same- Day Delivery options, as its edge on pricing dulls with the introducti­on of state sales taxes.

“As that advantage dissipates, they’re focusing more on convenienc­e, which is getting the product to your door as quickly as possible,” Olson says.

The Internet represents about 6% of the total U. S. economy, according to an economic policy white paper released by The Internet Society on Thursday.

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