• Home
  • Subscribe!
  • About Us / FAQ
  • Staff
  • Columns
  • Awards
  • Terms of Use
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Contact
  • OB Rag
  • Donate

San Diego Free Press

Grassroots News & Progressive Views

Walmart’s Top-to-Bottom Taxpayer Subsidies

June 5, 2014 by Source

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • More
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

We’re all footing the bill for bonuses the company’s executives pocket and food stamps its underpaid workers obtain for survival.

WalMartGestapoBy Frank Clemente and Sarah Anderson / OtherWords

Low-income families weren’t the only ones hurt bycuts to food stamps last fall. Top Walmart executives also took a hit.

The cutbacks ate into the discount giant’s salesbecause so many of its low-income customers rely on this public assistance program to help pay for their groceries. And that made it tough for the company’s top brass to meet their bonus targets.

But that wave of anxiety didn’t last long. Walmart’s board simply rejiggered bonus criteria so that executives could still reap “performance” payouts, The New York Times reported.

Why are most corporate boards determined to maintain sky-high pay for executives even when they perform poorly? The most common explanation is that board members are often overpaid corporate leaders themselves. The last thing they want to do is provoke scrutiny of their own fat paychecks.

Another, lesser-known reason is that corporations actually have a perverse incentive for overpaying top-level executives. This is due to a tax loophole that allows corporations to deduct unlimited amounts from their federal income taxes for the cost of so-called “performance pay” for executives. The more corporations pay top officers, the less they pay Uncle Sam.

Guess who makes up the difference? Taxpayers.

A new report we co-authored for the Institute for Policy Studies and Americans for Tax Fairness calculates just how much this bonus loophole benefits Walmart. For example, we found that Mike Duke, the big box retailer’s recently retired CEO, pocketed nearly $116 million in exercised stock options and other “performance pay” between 2009 and 2014. That translates into a taxpayer subsidy for Walmart of more than $40 million.

By lowering the performance bar for Walmart’s executives, the company’s board has kept the bosses happy and secured a nice big tax break. Consider the tradeoff here: This $40 million subsidy could have covered the average cost of food stamps for 4,200 people over that six-year period.

Congress should end this subsidy for bonuses at the top of Walmart and other publicly held U.S. corporations, which costs $50 billion over 10 years, by simply eliminating the “performance pay” loophole.

Meanwhile, the government is continuing to gut food stamp benefits. As part of a Farm Bill compromise this year, lawmakers agreed to reduce the program’s benefits by an average of $90 a month for 850,000 families.

Walmart’s low-wage workers are likely to be among those affected. Near-poverty wages and part-time schedules have forced the company’s own employees to rely on $6.2 billionworth of food stamps and other taxpayer-funded benefits per year, Americans for Tax Fairness estimates.

For a company that hauled in $16 billion in profits last year, this is shameful.

Walmart’s workers are speaking out more than ever before. In the past two years, about 1,000 Walmart stores have faced strikes or rallies for better pay and working conditions. In January 2014, the National Labor Relations Board charged the corporation with illegally disciplining and firing workers who participated in these actions.

Barbara Collins, a single mother from Placerville, California, wrote in Salon about her decision to join strike actions after struggling for years to make ends meet while earning $12.05 an hour as a Walmart stocker. For years, she was never guaranteed a 40-hour workweek. During some weeks she worked as few as eight hours. Following a confrontation with a Walmart board member about the company’s poor pay and working conditions, she got fired.

Despite the intimidation, Walmart workers and their allies are organizing a new round of strikes that began before the corporation’s June 6 annual shareholder meeting

Taxpayers should support these workers by demanding an end to subsidies for Walmart’s inexcusable pay practices — at both the bottom and the top.

Sarah Anderson directs the Global Economy Project at the Institute for Policy Studies, and Frank Clemente is the executive director of Americans for Tax Fairness. They wroteTaxpayers Subsidize Walmart Execs, a new report. Distributed via OtherWords.org

  • Bio
  • Latest Posts
Source

Source

Source

Latest posts by Source (see all)

  • And Then They Came for the Vietnamese… - December 13, 2018
  • Amazon’s Disturbing Plan to Add Face Surveillance to Your Front Door - December 13, 2018
  • 140+ Arrested as Youth-Led Protests Demand Green New Deal on Capitol Hill - December 11, 2018

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Filed Under: Business, Economy, Politics

« 8 of the Most Absurd Reactions to Obamas’s New Climate Change Rules
San Diego Chamber & Taxpayer Group Call for Ending Child Labor Laws »
San Diego Free Press Has Suspended Publication as of Dec. 14, 2018

Let it be known that Frank Gormlie, Patty Jones, Doug Porter, Annie Lane, Brent Beltrán, Anna Daniels, and Rich Kacmar did something necessary and beautiful together for 6 1/2 years. Together, we advanced the cause of journalism by advancing the cause of justice. It has been a helluva ride. "Sometimes a great notion..." (Click here for more details)

#ResistanceSD logo; NASA photo from space of US at night

Click for the #ResistanceSD archives

Make a Non-Tax-Deductible Donation

donate-button

A Twitter List by SDFreePressorg

KNSJ 89.1 FM
Community independent radio of the people, by the people, for the people

"Play" buttonClick here to listen to KNSJ live online

At the OB Rag: OB Rag

How the Forgotten Statue — ‘The Black Family’ — Is Finally Coming Home to Mountain View Park After 12 Years

83 California Hospitals — Including 3 in San Diego County — Could Face Closure After Federal Medicaid Cuts, New Report Shows

Could Kamala Harris Become the Next Governor of California?

‘Find the Money Somewhere Else!’ Push Back Mounts Against Gloria’s Budget of Austerity

City Council Supports Exemptions for Mission Bay Park from ‘Surplus Land’

  • Sitemap
  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Terms of Use

©2010-2017 SanDiegoFreePress.org

Code is Poetry

%d