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Loading... Wal-Mart: The Bully of Bentonville: How the High Cost of Everyday Low…by Anthony Bianco
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Compelling and interesting and comprehensive. The author, a BusinessWeek editor, puts together all the stories and research about Wal-Mart and its deletory effects on our economy, culture, and labor market. On the downside, the editing does not seem strong: it rambled across and seems to include every possible piece of research and anecdote, no matter how interesting, and some of them repeated twice which I've never experienced before and now why. It could have been a taut read at 160 pages instead of its watery 252 pages repeating itself. It never becomes polemic and does itself justice in that regard. ( )Informative and interesting, without being too boring. Talks about employee health insurance, paychecks, unions (or lack thereof), and more. Do you shop at Wal-Mart? You probably won't after reading this book. I have worked for consumer packaged goods manufacturers and have seen the challenges that Wal-Mart (Wally World to its friends) puts in the way of doing business, and this book accurately captures them. It also accurately captures the delicate balance of "damned if you do...damned if you don't" that is the essence of doing business with Wal-Mart. All the same, I won't shop at Wal-Mart again, not until it cleans up its act, which I believe is scheduled for just before the Apocalypse. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0385513569, Hardcover)The largest company in the world by far, Wal-Mart takes in revenues in excess of $280 billion, employs 1.4 million American workers, and controls a large share of the business done by almost every U.S. consumer-product company. More than 138 million shoppers visit one of its 5,300 stores each week. But, as recent news stories show, Wal-Mart's "everyday low prices" come at a tremendous cost to workers, suppliers, competitors, and consumers.The definitive portrait of the juggernaut that is reshaping American, The Bully of Bentonville exposes the zealous, secretive, small-town mentality that rules Wal-Mart and chronicles its far-reaching consequences. In a gripping, richly textured narrative, Anthony Bianco shows how Wal-Mart has driven down retail wages throughout the country, even as their substandard pay and meager health-care policy have led to a double-digit employee turnover; why their aggressive expansion inevitably puts locally owned stores out of business; and how their pricing policies have forced suppliers to outsource work and move thousands of jobs overseas. Their power even influences what Americans can read, watch, and listen to; in the name of protecting its customers, Wal-Mart bans "racy" magazines and insists on sanitized versions of popular DVDs and CDs. Based on countless interviews with Wal-Mart employees, managers, executives, competitors, suppliers, customers, and community leaders, The Bully of Bentonville illuminates the story-behind-the-headlines and brings the truths about Wal-Mart into sharp focus. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:04 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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