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A progressive policy research center says that the nation’s largest retailer could easily afford to increase the wages of its employees, if it would choose to avoid “Wall Street financial maneuvers.”
In the media
Christopher Freeburn
Walmart, enmeshed in a debate over low wages highlighted by a food drive for employees at a Canton store, can significantly raise the salaries of sales clerks and other workers without having to find additional money for the pay hikes, says a research brief by a think tank.
In the media
Olivera Perkins
In its house editorial yesterday, USA Today retold the now-accepted story of Detroit’s bankruptcy. Railing on “reckless public pensions,” the newspaper told its readers that the Motor City is “Exhibit A for municipal irresponsibility” because it allegedly “negotiated generous pensions” that were too
In the media
David Sirota
In the past week, both a senior editor at Fortune magazine and the liberal think tank Demos have made similar proposals for how Walmart could greatly increase worker wages without harming its business prospects.
In the media
Hamilton Nolan
“We are on strike today to have respect and dignity at work,” says Walter Melendez, one of approximately 40 Los Angeles port truck drivers who walked off the job at 5a.m. morning in protest of alleged unfair labor practices. The strikes featured the rolling “ambulatory pickets” that the truckers
In the media
Sarah Jaffe
Today is World Toilet Day, which strikes me as a good moment to reflect on how government can radically improve people's daily lives.
Blog
David Callahan

How Walmart Can Invest in Its Workforce Without Costing Customers a Dime

Research
Catherine Ruetschlin
Amy Traub
We need to restore the positive concept of public goods that existed decades ago.
Blog
June Sekera
A new brief by the national public policy organization Demos analyzes one way Walmart can raise worker pay to meet employees’ $25,000 benchmark target. A Higher Wage is Possible: How Walmart Can Invest in Its Workforce Without Costing Customers a Dime details how Walmart can give workers a raise by
Press release/statement
A historic $13 billion settlement is in the works between the federal government and JP Morgan -- the biggest-ever penalty for wrongdoing by a bank. But this settlement is unlikely to deter tomorrow's lawbreakers in finance, and here's why.
Blog
David Callahan