Wal-Mart’s Labor Problem

By Aaron Ludensky, CampusProgress, September 15, 2008

The company has a history of (not) dealing with workers’ rights and shirking on employee benefits.

There are a lot of reasons to dislike Wal-Mart. From running small-town businesses into the ground to its notorious environmental “green washing,” Wal-Mart has a reputation for being the big corporation everyone loves to hate.

But the company’s most egregious problems are with labor. Accusations against the company range from workers being denied overtime to union busting. The company’s corporate management insists that these accusations are unfounded and that this rhetoric is slander meant to bring down the company. But Wal-Mart continues to pay out millions of dollars in settlements from lawsuits brought against the company. In the last two years, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ruled against Wal-Mart six times for activities related to union-busting. Read more

Wal-Mart Move into Mexico Paying Off, Rivals Hurting

By Alexander Hanrath, Bloomberg News, February 8, 2004

Standing in his cramped stall in Mexico City’s Bugambilla market — a concrete building teeming with food, flowers, and household items — Jorge Llerena says his profit from selling beans and rice has dropped 5 percent in the past two years.

The reason: Customers he’s had for two decades are shopping at the Wal-Mart de Mexico SA supercenter five minutes away.

“Wal-Mart has a better range of products,” says Llerena, 52, rubbing his gray stubble in his 10-by-10-foot booth. “To keep business, we’ve had to sacrifice our profit margins.”

Llerena isn’t the only one whose profits are suffering. Wal- Mart’s three biggest rivals — supermarkets Organizacion Soriana SA, Controladora Comercial Mexicana SA, and Grupo Gigante SA –say their combined earnings plunged 42 percent to 2.7 billion pesos ($249 million) in 2002 from 4.6 billion pesos in 1999 as they tried to match Wal-Mart’s prices. In the same year, Wal-Mart de Mexico earned 4.9 billion pesos.

The world’s biggest company by sales set up shop in Mexico in 1991 with a Sam’s Club warehouse in Mexico City. Its early stores were 50-50 partnerships with Mexico’s biggest retailing chain, Cifra SA.

In 1996, Wal-Mart merged its Mexican stores into Cifra and paid $1.2 billion for a 62 percent stake in the new company, which it called Wal-Mart de Mexico.

Shares of Wal-Mart de Mexico, 38 percent of which trade on the Mexico City Stock Exchange, have more than doubled since the company’s creation. Now valued at $14 billion, Walmex, as it’s known, is Mexico’s third-biggest stock, behind Telefonos de Mexico SA and America Movil SA.

Since Wal-Mart moved in, everything from Mexico’s work force to the country’s inflation rate to the efficiency of suppliers has been affected. The company makes 92 percent of its purchases, or about $8 billion a year, in Mexico. That’s equal to 1.3 percent of Mexico’s gross domestic product.

Since 2001, Walmex has added 26,000 jobs. Mexico’s unemployment rate rose to a six-year high of 4 percent in August 2003. Today, Walmex is Mexico’s largest private employer, with about 101,000 workers. That compares with 38,000 at Organizacion Soriana, its closest competitor. During the same period, rival Controladora Comercial Mexicana shed 12 percent of its employees as it acquired a smaller rival.

For some job hunters, Walmex is the only game in town. “I looked for a job for a year and a half after leaving high school, and finally, I was happy to find this,” says Jocelyn Robles, 18, who was making $1 an hour stocking shelves for the Christmas season at Walmex’s supercenter in the Buenavista neighborhood of Mexico City. She says the pay is “OK” — similar to what her friends earn.

Walmex discourages its employees from joining unions. It pays an organization to negotiate collective contracts to comply with labor laws, says Marco Antonio Torres of the Center for Labor Studies. He says Walmex keeps the contracts on hand to meet legal requirements. Walmex says it acts in line with competitors.

Walmex has helped reduce Mexico’s inflation rate, says Edgar Amador, an economist at Stone & McCarthy Research Associates in Mexico City. That’s because goods that Walmex sells, such as Lala milk and Tia Rosa tortillas, account for 42 percent of the items the central bank uses to measure prices.

“One unknown ally of the central bank’s success against inflation has been Walmex,” Amador says. “It goes all the way down the chain to the producer.” In 2002, Walmex’s demands on suppliers led Mexico’s Federal Competition Commission to investigate what it called “monopolistic practices in self-service stores.” The commission was suspicious that Walmex was using its size to force suppliers to sell at better terms than to competing stores. On March 6, 2003, it ended the probe, saying there was no evidence of monopolistic practices.

Prepara UNAM Proyecto para Purificar Agua de Lluvia

Por Sergio Pereztrejo, El Sol de Mexico, Mayo 18, 2010

La captación de agua de lluvia en los techos de loza de las casas en Tlalpan, que será purificada para consumo humano, se hará posible en un lapso no mayor a un año, pues la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) trabaja en la elaboración de un proyecto piloto que se aplicará en las zonas donde hay más escasez de este líquido.

Así lo informó Higinio Chávez García, jefe delegacional de Tlalpan, al reunirse con habitantes de los pueblos de San Miguel Topilejo, San Miguel Ajusco, San Miguel Xicalco y San Andrés Totoltepec, a quienes explicó que la captación de agua de lluvia es un sistema ancestral que ha sido practicado en diferentes épocas y culturas.

Mencionó que la Dirección General de Ecología, de la delegación Tlalpan, está trabajando en un proyecto interinstitucional con la UNAM para el diseño de un proyecto que permitirá convertir todas las viviendas con techo de loza, en captadores de agua pluvial.

La delegación, dijo, adquirirá todos los materiales que se requieran para capturar el agua de lluvia; dichos sistemas se colocarán en las viviendas que tengan techo de loza y, de acuerdo con el proyecto de la UNAM, se buscarán mecanismos para purificar esa agua, con el fin de que sirva para consumo humano.

Mencionó que este sistema es un medio fácil y sensato de obtener agua para el consumo humano y para el uso agrícola. En aquellos lugares del mundo con alta o media precipitación y en donde no se cuenta con la suficiente cantidad y calidad de agua para consumo humano, se puede recurrir al agua de lluvia como fuente de abastecimiento.

Añadió que el agua de lluvia puede ser interceptada, colectada y almacenada en depósitos especiales para su uso posterior. Esto haría posible el hacer más llevadero el tiempo de secas y en un futuro sobrevivir las secas, ya que por el mal uso del agua y por factores tales como la deforestación masiva en el planeta, el agua escaseará progresivamente, lo cual significa que en un futuro no muy lejano, el sistema de captación de agua de lluvia será un mecanismo de sobrevivencia.

Chávez García exteriorizó su confianza para que el próximo año se aplique este programa piloto en la zona de los pueblos y Ajusco Medio, en donde hay una severa escasez de agua potable, pero que reciben grandes cantidades del líquido durante la temporada de lluvias.

La Guerra de la Soja

Extraordinario documental acerca de la soja o soya transgénica en América Latina emitido en La Portada de TVE La 2, España, el 1º feb.09. Guión de Lucia Oliva; realización de José Jiménez Pons; producción de Ana Pastor. (Duración aprox. 45min)

http://blip.tv/file/1780951/

El Neoliberalismo se Mantiene Vivo, Según Se Van Sellando Tratos entre UE y América Latina

Por Akito Yoshikane * del blog inthesetimes.com

Sindicatos se oponen a nuevos tratos por falta de estándares laborales y transparencia.

A raíz de la crisis global, se podría pensar que los gobiernos serían más cautos en aprobar tratados de libre comercio. Pero eso es lo que justamente están haciendo líderes europeos y latinoamericanos en España esta semana, discutiendo la expansión de las relaciones económicas mediante el establecimiento de nuevos acuerdos comerciales. Read more