The Palm Beach Post

Walmart boosts hourly pay to $11, adds bonuses

- By Matthew Boyle

Walmart is boosting its starting hourly wage to $11 and delivering bonuses to employees, capitalizi­ng on the U.S. tax overhaul to stay competitiv­e in a tightening labor market.

The increase takes effect next month and will cost $300 million on top of annual wage hikes that were already planned, the world’s largest retailer said Thursday. The one-time bonus of up to $1,000 is based on seniority and will amount to an additional $400 million. The company is also expanding its maternity and parental leave policy and adding an adoption benefit.

Walmart, the nation’s largest private employer, has fought in recent years to improve its image as it weathered criticism over its treatment of employees. With the wage increase and bonus payment, the company seeks to even its pay gap with resurgent rival Target, while simultaneo­usly sending a high-profile thank-you to the U.S. government for slashing the corporate tax rate.

“Tax reform gives us the opportunit­y to be more competitiv­e globally and to accelerate plans for the U.S.,” Chief Executive Officer Doug McMillon said in a statement.

The move comes three years after Walmart last announced it was raising wages, spending $1 billion in 2015 to lift starting hourly pay to $9 and then $10 the following year for workers who complete a 90-day training course. The increase cut into profit and was criticized by some longer-tenured employees as unfair to them.

Since then, many states have enacted minimum wage laws, meaning that a “sizable group” of its 4,700 U.S. stores already pays $11 an hour, Walmart spokesman Kory Lundberg said.

“We think this is a prudent use of tax reform proceeds as it reinforces the company’s commitment to improving in-store service levels and will pressure other retailers to invest more heavily into wages and prices,” Ben Bienvenu, an analyst at Stephens, said in a note.

Investors didn’t have a strong reaction to the pay hike. Walmart shares showed little change Thursday after the stock advanced 43 percent in 2017.

The nation’s unemployme­nt rate also has plummeted to 4.1 percent from 5.7 percent since Walmart’s first announceme­nt of higher wages in 2015, creating a battle to recruit and retain cashiers and shelf stockers.

Even with the wage bump, many workers will struggle if they’re the sole breadwinne­r. A rate of $11 an hour translates to $22,000 a year for a typical 40-hour week, without paid vacation time. The federal poverty level for a family of four is about $24,600, according to the Census Bureau.

The wage hike follows Target’s October decision to increase its minimum hourly wage to $11, which it will further boost to $15 by the end of 2020. Costco Wholesale Corp. and other retail chains also have raised wages in recent years.

Walmart’s decision makes it the latest corporate titan to plow expected tax savings into employee payouts. Boeing, AT&T and Wells Fargo have made similar announceme­nts in recent weeks. Walmart said it’s “early in the process of assessing potential additional investment­s” it could make.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Walmart employee Laila Ummelaila gathers items for online shoppers in Old Bridge, N.J. The company is investing $700 million to increase salaries and give bonuses.
JULIO CORTEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS Walmart employee Laila Ummelaila gathers items for online shoppers in Old Bridge, N.J. The company is investing $700 million to increase salaries and give bonuses.

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