The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Amazon to hire 100,000 full-time workers

New hires will fill jobs in California, Texas fulfillmen­t centers.

- By Mae Anderson

NEW YORK — Amazon plans to hire 100,000 full time workers over the next 18 months, highlighti­ng its ambitious expansion plans — and the sharp contrast the e-commerce powerhouse strikes against traditiona­l brickand-mortar retailers, many of which are cutting jobs and closing stores.

Amazon has long been known for investing the money it makes back into its businesses, and it’s doing that with a vengeance. The new hires will largely support new Amazon fulfillmen­t centers in states such as Texas and California, expanded delivery capabiliti­es and its money-minting Amazon Web Services cloud computing business.

The numbers are generally in line with Amazon’s past hiring plans. Amazon, which had a total of 306,800 full-time and part-time employees globally at the end of September, hired a total of 123,700 globally during the 15 months ended in September, according to quarterly filings.

Amazon said Thursday its U.S. workforce has grown from 30,000 in 2011 to over 180,000 at the end of 2016. By comparison, Walmart — the world’s largest retailer — employs about 2.4 million people worldwide, including 1.5 million workers in the U.S.

Baird analyst Colin Sebastian said the announceme­nt shows that Amazon’s hiring appears to be accelerati­ng. “We view this announceme­nt positively in terms of the current trajectory of Amazon’s businesses, as well as management’s confidence in the longterm outlook,” he said. “The hiring is consistent with our view that Amazon will continue to invest aggressive­ly in its retail, media, technology and logistics businesses.”

The news comes a month after President-elect Donald Trump met with tech leaders, including Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. Throughout the presidenti­al election campaign Trump and Bezos clashed after Trump attacked Bezos and The Washington Post, which Bezos owns. But they appeared to make nice when Bezos attended the meeting in December.

Sean Spicer, the incoming White House press secretary, noted in a call with reporters on Thursday that Amazon made the announceme­nt after the meeting, when Trump urged tech leaders to keep jobs in the U.S.

Things are much less rosy at traditiona­l retailers. Last week, the Limited said it would close all its stores and Macy’s moved forward with plans to close 68 stores and will cut more than 10,000 jobs. There have been unconfirme­d reports Walmart is also planning layoffs. “The move from bricks to clicks is causing major disruption in the retail industry,” said economist Diane Swonk.

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