#29
Post
by wintergreen48 » Thu Apr 03, 2008 9:24 am
Of course, Wal Mart itself does not have deep pockets: it is a soulless corporation that is just a channel for the money that flows between other people's deep pockets.
The money that 'Wal Mart' paid out didn't actually come from Wal Mart, it actually came from the shareholders (whose dividends are impacted) and/or from the customers (who pay for the goods sold) and/or from the employees (whose salaries and benefits are a function of Wal Mart's costs and earnings); ultimately, it is the shareholders and/or customers and/or employees who will pay for Wal Mart doing 'the right thing.'
As a practical matter, I think it unlikely that the shareholders will actually pay, since, ultimately, management makes the final decision about where the money comes from and where the money goes, and ultimately management is responsible most directly to the shareholders, but rather, it will be the customers who will pay the cost (in the form of higher prices), and it will be lb13 who will pay the cost (in the form of higher medical premiums and/or reduced medical benefits).
Reminds me of something that happened when I was in college. Early in my sophomore year, the 50 Radical Kids on Campus organized a campus strike on behalf of the underpaid cafeteria workers and other service employees. As it happens, those workers were the highest paid in Philadelphia, but that did not come out until afterward; in any event, the University of Pennsylvania (aka, 'the Harvard of the Ivy League') caved, and Penn's cafeteria and other service workers got big pay raises that made them, apparently, the highest paid cafeteria and other service workers in the known universe. So for my junior year, there was a huge jump in tuition (a non-issue for me, as my scholarship kept pace, but a big deal for the students who were actually paying the cost of my tuition). So of course the 50 Radical Kids on Campus (many of whom, as it happened, happened to be among the highest income families, and so, were most directly impacted by the tuition increase, since they were subsidizing my own education) tried to demonstrate against that increase, but it did not go very well, since THIS time the University got its numbers together and was able to show exactly why they had to charge people more.