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Home >  Research Areas >  National Research Initiative >  Books >  The Wal-Mart Revolution
The Wal-Mart Revolution
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How Big-Box Stores Benefit Consumers, Workers, and the Economy
By Richard Vedder, Wendell Cox
Posted: Tuesday, November 14, 2006
National Research Initiative
Dimensions: 6'' x 9''
226 pages
AEI Press  (Washington)
Publication Date: December 2006
Paperback
ISBN: 978-0-8447-4244-1; 0-8447-4244-9
Price: $ 20.00
Add to Cart  
Examination Copies

The activities of Wal-Mart and other big-box retailers have become rallying cries for both sides of the political aisle. Richard Vedder and Wendell Cox's book, The Wal-Mart Revolution: How Big-Box Stores Benefit Consumers, Workers, and the Economy, is aimed at those involved in debates over Wal-Mart's impact on worker wages, labor issues, and health-insurance and land-use policies.

The Wal-Mart Revolution provides useful facts about the company, the U.S. retail industry, labor economics, health-care policy, and land-use realities in America today. Economist Vedder and public-private partnerships expert Cox painstakingly analyze available evidence before concluding that the economic transformation in American retailing which is personified by Wal-Mart has largely been good for Americans and the economy. Wal-Mart's basic business strategies have had a profoundly positive impact on America's productivity, wages, consumer prices, and other key economic variables.

 

Though the book was written without any cooperation from Wal-Mart, Vedder and Cox address several criticisms often lobbed at the company and demolish them one-by-one: 

 

  • Wal-Mart workers are paid fairly--given their level of skills and experience, and compared to other retail firms, Wal-Mart employees do well
  • Wal-Mart's fringe benefits--health-care coverage, retirement benefits, and more--are similar to those of other retail firms, and very few Wal-Mart workers go without health insurance
  • Big boxes mean big business: communities with new Wal-Mart stores typically enjoy increased employment and incomes after the store opens
  • Wal-Mart benefits the poor, in particular, in the form of lower prices and new job opportunities
  • Attempts to keep Wal-Mart out of communities through zoning restrictions, mandatory health insurance, or special high minimum wages hurt citizens, especially those with lower incomes


Richard Vedder is a visiting scholar at AEI, and director of the Center for College Affordability and Productivity in Washington, D.C.

Wendell Cox is an international public policy consultant and principal of Wendell Cox Consultancy (Demographia).

Related Links
An interview with Richard Vedder on National Review Online
Author's related article


Also by Richard Vedder
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Testimony before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress
Rankings Are Useful--but Go beyond "U.S. News"
Colleges Should Go Beyond the Rhetoric of Accountability
Previous Book
Going Broke by Degree
Why College Costs Too Much
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