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In South Africa, Wal-Mart Refuses to Buy Local, Threatens WTO Action, and Wins
Two things seem particularly noteworthy about the approval Wal-Mart won yesterday to acquire Massmart, a Johannesburg-based chain that operates across 13 African countries.
One is that, despite the ample publicity Wal-Mart has engineered for its "buy local" efforts, the company in fact has zero interest in cultivating local suppliers beyond stocking a few token local veggies suitable for a nice photo-op.
And two: even in countries where the law clearly states that the public interest must be protected in large mergers, global trade agreements give corporations the upper hand, or at least give government authorities an excuse to ignore their own laws.
In issuing its approval yesterday, South Africa's Competition Tribunal, a quasi-judicial body charged with protecting the public interest in large corporate mergers, imposed only minimal conditions on the deal, stating that stronger requirements to protect local suppliers and labor rights "could violate the country's trade obligations."
Wal-Mart first raised the specter the World Trade Organization (WTO) during its closing arguments before the tribunal, which had just heard a week of testimony from unions, government officials, economists and others who built a compelling case that the merger should be subject to strict conditions or rejected altogether.
The strength of the opposition seemed to surprise Wal-Mart, which has not made a significant acquisition since it bought the British supermarket chain Asda in 1998.
South Africa's robust trade unions, led by the Commercial, Catering and Allied Workers' Union (CCAWU), which represents Massmart employees, had begun organizing to block the merger last fall, issuing a list of demands shortly after the deal became public.
The government departments of trade, agriculture and economic development also came out against the deal.
One of the pivotal issues concerned sourcing. Massmart currently buys 60 percent of its goods from South African manufacturers and farmers. Wal-Mart would supplant these networks of local production and trade with its own global supply chain, sending a flood of imported food and other goods into a country that already has 25 percent unemployment. A government-commissioned analysis concluded that every 1 percent shift from domestic to overseas suppliers by Massmart would cost the country 4,000 jobs.
Momentum began to build in favor of imposing a local procurement quota as a condition of the merger. But local sourcing is untenable to Wal-Mart. Although the company has orchestrated heaps of positive media by stocking a few items of local produce in its U.S. stores, what makes Wal-Mart Wal-Mart is its global supply chain. The company is not so much a retailer as a distributor. Its market power comes from its ability to acquire goods in one location and distribute them across the planet with a remarkable degree of precision and efficiency. If buying locally from South African producers became a condition of the merger, Wal-Mart would have to drop the deal.
Worried about losing Massmart and, with it, a launching pad for all of Africa, Wal-Mart in its closing arguments raised the threat of a WTO action if the Competition Tribunal pursued the sourcing condition. Although the question of global trade agreements had not surfaced in the debate before, it became a central theme of the media coverage during the tribunal's final two weeks of deliberation.
Wal-Mart also offered a list of merger conditions that it told the tribunal it would be glad to comply with, including putting about $14 million into a "suppler development fund" to help South African producers learn how to become Wal-Mart suppliers. (The company is spending $2.4 billion to buy Massmart, which does about $7 billion in sales each year.)
The Competition Tribunal adopted Wal-Mart's minimal conditions as its own and approved the deal with no other stipulations.
International expansion is critical for Wal-Mart, which has seen same-store sales in the U.S. decline for eight consecutive quarters. But while it has established a foothold in South America, Asia, Europe, and now Africa, Wal-Mart's global ambitions have often fallen short of expectations. It pulled out of Germany and South Korea after losing billions of dollars. Its growth in China has been relatively weak given the size of the country, and Asda has yet to challenge Tesco's dominance of the UK market.
South Africa's tough and politically influential trade unions promise anything but smooth sailing for Wal-Mart's entry into Africa. CCAWU says leaders will be meeting later this month to chart their next move, which could include disruptive protests, strikes and "the mother of all boycotts."
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8 Comments so far
Show All"International expansion is critical for Wal-Mart, which has seen same-store sales in the U.S. decline for eight consecutive quarters."
I thought Walmart was supposed to be reaping the benefits of the economic downturn and immensely high unemployment. Good to know that more and more people are hating Walmart, regardless of how much they are able to spend.
Politicscorner,
I too noted the comment on Walmart's declining sales. But I fear you're taking away the wrong lesson. Its not that their customer base has suddenly learned to hate them and that's the reason for declining sales.
Its the fact that the typical Walmart shopper are themselves on the lower end of the wage scale. The very same people who've seen their jobs disappear or their wages go down. They simply don't have the money to even shop at Walmart. This decline is being seen across the board as average working people are simply broke.
The high end retailers however are seeing record sales. Luxury cars, jewelry, designer dresses, thousand dollar purses, etc.
We're seeing the predictable results of impoverishing the average citizen while transferring all the wealth to the few.
But the larger issue this article is pointing out is that these international trade agreements are undermining local and national governments worldwide while simultaneously impoverishing their citizens and increasing the wealth of the few.
All good wishes to the South African people and their union battles against this corporate pig Wal-Mart. The WTO has GOT to go!
Remember when Wal-Mart first started and they advertised that all their products were made in America? Big, impossible to miss red white and blue, made in the U.S.A. stamped all over their Ads.. Then the scandal came out involving Kathy Lee Gifford's clothes all being made in third world country, sweat shops. I have boycotted Wal-Marts since they sent me those deceitful ads about selling all, made in America products but I could not find any, putting small businesses out of business. The other reason for my boycott was their refusal to sell some type of birth control pills for women and girls, another reason was the treatment of women who had to sue them for fair treatment,ect..
No country NEEDS Wal Mart.
Kick them out. Tell the WTO to take a hike.
Two way to ensure people are better off - better wages or ensuring a cheaper cost of living.
Like it or hate it, Wal Mart helps by making things cheaper and creating a more competitive market. Forcing South Africans to pay higher prices for stuff that can be brought in cheaper from abroad makes no sense at all unless you hate the poor. In fact Wal Mart (like any profit focused company) will stimulate local economic growth - they ain't going to buy from abroad whatever they can get better or cheaper from the local market.
Import substitution is a disastrous policy has already screwed hundreds of millions of people around the world, the last thing we should be advocating is inflicting the same poverty enhancing policy on South Africa.
Over the past couple of decades more than a billion Asians have risen from abject poverty due to enlightened trade-friendly policies. Let's give Africans the same opportunities! For a change . . .
Your comment is wrong in so many ways. It is wal-mart that hates poor people. And middle class people. And small business. And quality. And the environment.
wal-mart sucks
"Import substitution is a disastrous policy..."
New Zealand restricted imports for decades and we had full employment, a good balance of payments situation and a high standard of living. Since we've stopped, we can't make such claims.
"Over the past couple of decades more than a billion Asians have risen from abject poverty due to enlightened trade-friendly policies."
These researchers at the World Bank reckon China’s increase in trade had little effect on poverty reduction – with much of the drop in poverty happening prior to trade reform. They suggest land reform and the removal of government compulsory purchasing of agricultural products at very low prices was the key to China’s drop in poverty rates: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=625285