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Communities Should Welcome Wal-Mart–in the Name of Freedom and Justice

 No one has the right to prevent businesses from expanding to new locations.

How would you like to be penalized because you do your work too well — for example, for running your business so effectively that it attracts hordes of happy customers? Well, this is what is happening more and more frequently to Wal-Mart. A lengthy anti-Wal-Mart campaign by politicians and activists in San Fernando Valley, CA — which included forcing Wal-Mart to have completed a year-long “environmental impact study” — has led Wal-Mart to abandon plans to open a store in the area. High among the activists’ concerns was that the Wal-Mart store would “threaten” other businesses and replace higher-paying jobs in the area with lower-paying ones. Similar activists in California and throughout the country have gone so far as to ban Wal-Mart from their cities.

Wal-Mart is one of the most impressive success stories in the history of business. Founded some 50 years ago as a single five-and-dime store in a small Arkansas town, it has grown into a worldwide behemoth under the leadership of its brilliant founder, the late Sam Walton, and his able successors. It is the largest corporation in America in terms of sales, $245 billion. Wal-Mart has over 4,000 stores worldwide, employs 1.3 million people, and serves 100 million customers per week.

It is quite true that Wal-Mart has been successful in outcompeting other stores which sell the same products, such as toys, clothing, and groceries. But how has it been able to do this? By discovering new ways of using computer systems and other technology to better manage its inventory and costs and reap the benefits of economy of scale.

Wal-Mart is especially popular among low-income shoppers who cannot afford the prices of the more upscale stores. It has put other stores out of business, but that is the way capitalism works. The automobile replaced the horse and buggy. Sound motion picture replaced silent movies. No one has a “right” to business success or a “right” to be protected from competitors through government intervention. One only has a right to try to compete through voluntary trade. In a free economy, companies that offer the best value for the dollar win and the losers invest their money elsewhere.

It is also true that Wal-Mart pays lower wages than many unionized stores. But it must offer a market wage or risk its employees going elsewhere, and it deals with employees on a voluntary basis. Those who do not like its terms are free to do business elsewhere. This makes the company especially hated by “organized labor,” such as the grocery unions. By coercively restricting the supply of labor, these unions, backed by government laws and regulations, have been able to extort wages and benefits far above those which would exist in a truly free labor market. In a free market, how many people doing relatively unskilled work would get $17-19 per hour plus full medical benefits? Unions, of course, have the right to organize and picket but not to benefit from government regulations which give them special favors. No one has the right to dictate what a company offers to pay others.

There is only one proper way to keep Wal-Mart out of any community: don’t patronize its stores. If Wal-Mart cannot make money in a given location, it will either not move there or will close the store. So far, however, it makes money everywhere it opens a store for one simple reason: customers want to shop there. The low prices Wal-Mart offers make people wealthier. They can buy a wide range of quality goods that they could not otherwise afford and they can use the money they save for other purposes.

Local governments should not be allowed to abuse their power by keeping out stores that consumers want to shop in. Nor, of course, should Wal-Mart be allowed to use eminent domain laws, as it is trying to do in several states, to force property owners to sell their land. But so long as it refrains from using eminent domain, we should welcome every store that Wal-Mart builds. We should thank this great company for being so good at giving customers what they want that they make huge profits, which enables them to build more stores, hire more employees, give more profit opportunities to suppliers and make even more customers happy.

Wal-Mart should not be feared but should be admired as an American ideal — a classic rags to riches story. It is the quintessential example of an innovator left free to function. Only in a country where individual rights — at least what’s left of them — are recognized, including the right to earn a profit, could a company like Wal-Mart arise and prosper. Trying to stop Wal-Mart is not only morally wrong, it is un-American.

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8 comments to Communities Should Welcome Wal-Mart–in the Name of Freedom and Justice

  • Rich Sherlock

    I have nothing to fear from Walmart. The worst thing Walmart could ever do to me is overcharge me, but even this is a voluntary exchange.

    If there is an entity to fear, it is government. The government takes my money whether I give it permission to or not. It takes just as much as it wants, whenever and wherever it wants. If I don’t like it and refuse to pay, it levies penalties and fines. If I still refuse to pay, it can take my property and sell it. If that doesn’t settle the amount it thinks I owe, I could be sent to jail.

    Government has unlimited and unrestricted claim to my income, my wealth, my property, and my freedom. By definition, I am a defacto slave to the interests of government.

  • Shane Atwood

    Rick Sherlock, you the guy that writes to the chronicle here in Bozeman all the time? Crazy coincidence seein’ you here, eh?

  • Rich Sherlock

    Yeah, it’s me. Love this website.

  • David Lee

    A common argument to keep Wal Mart out of a town is that it’ll kill small business. Rubbish! Those eager to embrace Darwinism should embrace this
    most Darwinian of concepts: if a small business cannot compete then it deserves extinction. It would follow, then, that the way to compete
    against Wal Mart is to offer goods or services that WallyWorld cannot or will not. Simplistic? Not really. But more than possible. After all,
    go to your nearest WalMart and chances are you’ll find other shops and restaurants adjacent to the store or in close proximity to it. They can’t
    survive on just good looks. Obviously, they must offer something that the Arkansas behemoth doesn’t.

  • David Lee

    A common argument to keep Wal Mart out of a town is that it’ll kill small business. Rubbish! Those eager to embrace Darwinism should embrace this
    most Darwinian of concepts: if a small business cannot compete then it deserves extinction. It would follow, then, that the way to compete
    against Wal Mart is to offer goods or services that WallyWorld cannot or will not.

  • ibbleblibble

    so if big boxmart ever does engage in less than decent practices, who the hell in the bought and paid for mainstream media will tell us and lose all that pr advertising revenue? hell, when even pbs has the nads to say something less than flattering about 37.5 hour a week cheeze-asses, bigboxmart’s bought and paid for political stooges commence an all out campaign to jerk public funding from the only source of non-commercially compromised news…and succeed in shuting them up!

    when my old man retired he got a job as a bigboxmart door greeter, worked for some years prior to his alzhiemer’s death. imagine my fury when i found out he had been the subject, with bigboxmart the beneficiary of, a pissant insurance policy that wonderful icon of made in america plastic crap referred to in intra company memos as “dead peasant’s insurance”. apparantly he was far from the only one. this is how bigboxmart views its employees, my cheap plastic crap addicted friends. wonder how it views you?

  • robert weiss

    The proper role of government is the protection of its’ citizens. A store, while a legal entity, is not a citizen. If a community deprives a store from moving in, if for no other reason than it would
    protect the property values of citizens, it is performing the obligations of government. I don’t see the property values being improved by an employer that pays the cheapest wages, sells the cheapest goods and caters to the poorest patrons.

  • ibbleblibble

    hey – seen the latest in te bigboxmart pr we’re-really-concerned-nice-guys bullshit blitz? with the por skiny hungry kid being fed by his friends at school? awwww… bigboxmart cares (now that sales are beginning to teeter and people are realizing despite their econmic censorial clampdown).

    i bet that hingry little tyke’s mom works at bigboxmart and his dad lost his job because of the brand big new bigboxmart that opened up!!! har har har – plastic crap and lies for everyone!!!!!

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