Chain of Greed: How Walmart’s Domestic Outsourcing Harms Workplace Rights of Warehouse Workers (2024)

Report

June 06, 2012

June 06, 2012

by Anastasia Christman Areas of expertise: Labor Market Research, Policy Analysis, Policy Research, Unions and Labor Law Read Profile

Chain of Greed: How Walmart’s Domestic Outsourcing Harms Workplace Rights of Warehouse Workers (1)

by Maurice Emsellem Areas of expertise: Criminal Records and Employment, Unemployment Insurance Read Profile

Chain of Greed: How Walmart’s Domestic Outsourcing Harms Workplace Rights of Warehouse Workers (2)

by Catherine Ruckelshaus Areas of expertise: Enforcement of Workplace Standards, Immigrants and Work, Nonstandard Workforce, Wage and Hour Protections Read Profile

Chain of Greed: How Walmart’s Domestic Outsourcing Harms Workplace Rights of Warehouse Workers (3)

by Rebecca Smith Areas of expertise: Enforcement of Workplace Standards, Immigrants and Work, International Human and Labor Rights, Unemployment Insurance Read Profile

by Eunice Hyunhye Cho

  • Tweet
    • Email

    Prev Next

    Executive Summary

    Few U.S. corporations have attracted more intense scrutiny of their business and labor practices than Walmart. However, while poor working conditions and wage violations among the company’s retail employees have been documented and worker rights violations attributed to Walmart’s international suppliers well publicized, far less understood are the pervasive labor abuses that take place outside of Walmart’s stores but in its domestic supply chain, in service of its bottom line here in the U.S. These worker rights violations are largely the product of Walmart’s signature and aggressive practice of “outsourcing” elements of its warehousing, transportation, and goods-delivery systems to companies that, in turn, often further subcontract the work to still other entities or individuals.

    These outsourced workers laboring on Walmart’s behalf toil at the bottom of a complex hierarchy of intermediaries and in alternative employment schemes that leave them vulnerable to significant worker rights abuses and unsure where to seek redress. Walmart sets the parameters for the working conditions in these facilities, sometimes directly by having managers onsite, and sometimes indirectly through monitoring suppliers’ operating costs and setting ever more stringent price demands. But when things go wrong, it’s the contractors that are blamed, while Walmart skirts responsibility for its actions and accountability for its influence over those engaged in its massive supply chain.

    This report seeks to shed light on this shady side of outsourcing by profitable corporations like Walmart, and the devastating impact of the practice on U.S. workers. It is a case study of how domestic outsourcing, when not properly regulated by robust laws, and when used by aggressive cost-cutting corporate giants, squeezes all the players in the supply chain beyond their limits, ultimately inflicting severe pain on the subcontracted workforce. In the case of Walmart’s logistics systems, it is a story of low-paid and extremely dangerous warehouse work, with workers unloading and loading boxes, up to 200-pounds, from shipping containers on a piece rate system for days and hours on end.

    But it is also an inspiring story of a diverse and talented workforce that is bravely organizing and risking retaliation by taking on Walmart and its contractors to fight for fair working conditions, and of determined state officials seeking to ensure that the labor and employment laws are strongly enforced to level the playing field for law-abiding employers. Focusing on the warehouse workers employed in Southern California and elsewhere who move Walmart goods across the U.S., this report seeks to promote a broader discussion about corporations’ decisions to contract-out dangerous, labor-intensive parts of their businesses to the lowest bidder, and the ill effects this can have on workers, their families, and communities.

    As described below, greater transparency and accountability within these multi-layered hydra-like logistics chains are urgently needed. At a time when U.S. economic growth skews so heavily toward low-wage industries and jobs, it is crucial that the public and policymakers alike better understand and respond to the practices and strategies that are propelling this lopsided change. We hope that this report and the case study it highlights will contribute to this broader understanding.

    Of special significance, the report details the following findings and conclusions:

    Domestic outsourcing is on the rise across key U.S. industries:
    Contracting out is becoming increasingly common in many of the nation’s largest and fastest-growing industries, including construction, day labor, janitorial and building services, home health care, warehousing and retail, agriculture, poultry and meat processing, high-tech, delivery, trucking, home-based work, and the public sectors. Even hotels have begun to outsource traditional functions, including cleaning services. Often relying on the use of temporary and staffing agencies, outsourcing in these industries has also resulted in comparatively lower wages for work similar to the jobs previously performed in-house.

    Walmart squeezes supply-chain contractors and U.S. workers:
    Walmart’s policy of enforcing ever-lower prices has serious implications for the working conditions throughout Walmart’s supply chain. Even manufacturing behemoths are not immune from the pressures Walmart can impose on their profit margins, and by extension, their employment practices. Walmart’s stated “Plus One” bargaining strategy, which requires that all suppliers and contractors reduce their price of goods, increase quality or increase speed of delivery every year, vividly exemplifies the pressure that squeezes contractors’ margins and encourages low-road employment behavior like cutting corners on safety and violating wage and hour laws.

    Walmart’s outsourced logistics operations raise critical labor concerns:
    As Walmart’s leadership once explained to Wall Street analysts, “The misconception is that we’re in the retail business, we’re in the distribution business.” While Walmart maintains a vast and sophisticated distribution system operated in-house, it also relies on some of the nation’s largest third-party providers to ship and store its goods, including Schneider National and Swift Transportation, which in turn contract with a complex web of temporary agencies to supply the warehouse workforce. In major logistics hubs around the U.S., from Southern California to Chicago to New Jersey, workers employed by outsourced Walmart logistics operations have raised allegations of unpaid wages, health and safety and other serious labor violations.

    Labor violations are rampant in Southern California’s Inland Empire, which is a warehouse nerve center for Walmart goods.
    Under the watchful eye of Walmart managers, the outsourced warehouse operations of Schneider Logistics and its temporary staffing firms (Rogers Premier and Impact Logistics) have produced rampant wage and overtime and health and safety violations that are the subject of a class action lawsuit. Indeed, evidence produced as a result of the lawsuit makes clear that Walmart is intimately involved in the daily operations of the Schneider operations, which solely move Walmart goods. This report, court documents and recent investigations by the California Labor Commissioner and the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA) reveal the breadth of labor abuses taking place in these warehouses. They include confusing “piece rate” pay schemes where workers are only paid for unloading and loading containers, not for other work performed, for working lengthy hourswith no overtime pay, for illegal and falsified pay records, and for hazardous workplace conditions (especially excessive heat, pressure for speed, and unstable storage stacking). These conditions have also created a climate of fear among a largely Latino workforce that claimed labor violations and were subsequently threatened with termination, and a federal court ruling vindicating the workers who alleged retaliation.

    Domestic outsourcing imposes an especially severe toll on Latino workers in Southern California and around the U.S.:
    Latinos often represent a large segment of those industries where domestic outsourcing by major corporations is most prevalent. In addition, the same industries that implement contracting-out and employ vulnerable, often Latino, workers frequently also have the highest rates of workplace violations of core labor standards. A 2009 study of over 1800 low-wage workers in Los Angeles – nearly 1300 of them Latino – found that minimum wage violations affected 38.3 percent of the workers, and that an astounding 79.6 percent of Latino workers had suffered violation of their overtime pay rights in the week prior to the survey. Logistics companies are no exception. In the production, packaging and warehousing occupations reported in the Los Angeles survey, overtime violation rates reached 37.3 percent of workers, with meal break violations affecting 83.4 percent of these workers.

    We should hold major corporations accountable for worker rights abuses that result from unfettered domestic outsourcing.
    The challenge for policy makers and enforcement agencies is to use existing enforcement tools effectively to protect workers’ interests, while developing new models to hold these corporate entities accountable for the conditions they engender within the production and logistics pyramids they command. The report offers a combination of strategies that go a long way to: (1) enforce existing labor standards laws that hold multiple entities jointly responsible for any work performed in the business; (2) promote innovative state and federal laws and enforcement strategies to target contracting abuses; (3) secure agreement from Walmart and other supply chain controllers to adopt strong codes of conduct; and (4) document the scope of contracting-out and its impact on U.S. workers.

    Download Complete Publication

    PDF

      Report

      Who’s the Boss: Restoring Accountability for Labor Standards in Outsourced Work

      May 07, 2014

      Read More

        Report

        Temped Out: How Domestic Outsourcing of Blue-Collar Jobs Harms America’s Workers

        September 02, 2014

        Read More

          Report

          Manufacturing Low Pay: Declining Wages in the Jobs That Built America’s Middle Class

          November 20, 2014

          Read More

            Subcontracted Workers: The Outsourcing of Rights and Responsibilities

            March 01, 2004

            Read More

              Contact

              National Employment Law Project

              90 Broad Street, Suite 1100, New York, NY 10004

              Work With Us

              View Job Openings

              Follow us
              General Inquiries

              nelp@nelp.org

              General Inquiries

              nelp@nelp.org

              Donor Inquiries

              development@nelp.org

              Media Inquiries

              Emily Orlich

              press@nelp.org

              Follow us
              Subscribe

              Website by Briteweb

              The site is for informational purposes only and does not provide legal advice. Website by Briteweb

              Back to Top of Page
              Chain of Greed: How Walmart’s Domestic Outsourcing Harms Workplace Rights of Warehouse Workers (2024)

              FAQs

              What are the problems with Walmart outsourcing? ›

              In major logistics hubs around the U.S., from Southern California to Chicago to New Jersey, workers employed by outsourced Walmart logistics operations have raised allegations of unpaid wages, health and safety and other serious labor violations.

              How does Walmart describe its approach to safeguarding the treatment of workers in its supply chain? ›

              Walmart's Approach

              Responsible sourcing: We hold our suppliers accountable for the responsible operation of their facilities and for safeguarding the well-being of workers in their facilities and supply chains.

              How does Walmart use outsourcing? ›

              Outsourcing allowed Walmart to maintain and even lower its prices, a key factor in its appeal to a broad consumer base. By sourcing goods from countries with lower labor and production costs, Walmart was able to offer a wide variety of products at prices that were often unbeatable by competitors, including Kmart.

              How does outsourcing affect employees? ›

              Outsourcing Erodes Company Loyalty

              Workplace satisfaction and worker productivity can be negatively impacted. Additionally, if an employee, or group of employees, decides that they are being either treated unfairly or underpaid, they can leave to start their own company in direct competition with their former employer.

              Is Walmart doing enough to protect workers in its supply chain? ›

              The retailer has been auditing, investigating and reporting on its supply chain to clean up labor abuses, but experts say many of the current best practices fall short. The sheer scale of Walmart's supply chain is hard to comprehend.

              What is the main problem with outsourcing? ›

              Outsourcing hinders complete project control. External companies aren't in-house. You can't fully manage how a third party performs duties when you delegate them. If you're used to controlling every detail of a project, it doesn't make sense to outsource.

              What is Walmart's supply chain practices? ›

              What is Walmart's supply chain strategy? Walmart's supply chain strategy is highly focused on direct, long-term relationships with manufacturers, distributors, and ecommerce businesses. The goal is to reduce the number of touchpoints within the supply chain to reduce lead times and speed up fulfillment.

              Why does Walmart outsource their production to China? ›

              To cut procurement costs, Wal-Mart moved its global outsourcing headquarters from Hong Kong to the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen in 2002 and began focusing intensely on directly sourcing from factories in China rather than buying through wholesalers and agents.

              What are some ways that a firm such as Walmart can go from outsourcing decisions? ›

              Hence the sourcing decisions which it takes is based on achieving its competitive advantage. Timely and rapid supply to the market, Good relationship with suppliers, leveraging its reach to increase customer base, improving product quality and reducing costs are the benefits from good sourcing decision.

              Is outsourcing good or bad? ›

              Outsourcing is hailed for its cost-saving benefits, access to expertise, and operational efficiency. Yet it comes with some drawbacks, such as loss of control or communication issues. That's why it all depends on the industry and the tasks you need to outsource.

              What does outsourcing lead to? ›

              Outsourcing non-core activities can improve efficiency and productivity because another entity performs these smaller tasks better than the firm itself. This strategy may also lead to faster turnaround times, increased competitiveness within an industry, and the cutting of overall operational costs.

              Why is outsourcing bad for the environment? ›

              Manufacturers can outsource pollution to countries with different production methods or lower standards just as they can outsource labor to countries with lower wages, by importing the goods created using that pollution and labor. The problem with outsourcing pollution depends on the nature of the pollutant.

              What are the challenges faced by Walmart company? ›

              While its legacy of low prices remains a core strength, the company faces a multitude of challenges, including the dominance of Amazon in e-commerce, evolving consumer preferences for convenience and specialization, and a precarious economic climate. The future of retail supremacy hinges on Walmart's ability to adapt.

              What are the problems with Walmart operations? ›

              Supply chain and inflation issues led the retailer to have way more supplies on hand than consumers were buying – leading to unwalkable backrooms packed with full pallets. Walmart has said since May that it would make a concerted effort to get through excess inventory, and, to its credit, it has kept its word.

              What is Walmart's biggest issue? ›

              Critics say that Walmart's lower prices draw customers away from smaller Main Street businesses, hurting local small-town communities, and that the company hurts the United States economy by relying excessively on Chinese-produced products – Walmart is the largest importer in the United States in many categories, such ...

              What is the problem with Walmart labor? ›

              Walmart employees complain of their inability to be hired full-time, a lack of medical benefits, and inconsistent scheduling that makes their lives difficult. Most of the $2.7 billion turnaround program was implemented, but employee hours have been cut, resulting in lower net pay than before.

              Top Articles
              Latest Posts
              Article information

              Author: Prof. Nancy Dach

              Last Updated:

              Views: 5540

              Rating: 4.7 / 5 (57 voted)

              Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

              Author information

              Name: Prof. Nancy Dach

              Birthday: 1993-08-23

              Address: 569 Waelchi Ports, South Blainebury, LA 11589

              Phone: +9958996486049

              Job: Sales Manager

              Hobby: Web surfing, Scuba diving, Mountaineering, Writing, Sailing, Dance, Blacksmithing

              Introduction: My name is Prof. Nancy Dach, I am a lively, joyous, courageous, lovely, tender, charming, open person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.