Thousands of Unpaid Teens Bag Groceries for Wal-Mart
By Joseph Contreras
Wal-Mart prides itself on cutting costs
at home and abroad, and its Mexican
operations are no exception. That
approach has helped the Arkansas-based
retail giant set a track record of
spectacular success in the 16 years
since it entered Mexico as a partner of
the country’s then-leading retail-store
chain. But some of the company’s
practices have aroused concern among
some officials and nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) that Wal-Mart is
taking advantage of local customs to
pinch pennies at a time when its Mexican
operations have never been more profitable.
Wal-Mart is Mexico’s largest
private-sector employer in the nation
today, with nearly 150,000 local
residents on its payroll. An additional
19,000 youngsters between the ages of 14
and 16 work after school in hundreds of
Wal-Mart stores, mostly as grocery
baggers, throughout Mexico-and none of
them receives a red cent in wages or
fringe benefits. The company doesn’t try
to conceal this practice: its 62
Superama supermarkets display blue signs
with white letters that tell shoppers:
OUR VOLUNTEER PACKERS COLLECT NO SALARY,
ONLY THE GRATUITY THAT YOU GIVE THEM.
SUPERAMA THANKS YOU FOR YOUR
UNDERSTANDING. The use of unsalaried
youths is legal in Mexico because the
kids are said to be “volunteering” their
services to Wal-Mart and are therefore
not subject to the requirements and
regulations that would otherwise apply
under the country’s labor laws. But some
officials south of the U.S. border
nonetheless view the practice as
regrettable, if not downright
exploitative. “These kids should receive
a salary,” says Labor Undersecretary
Patricia Espinosa Torres. “If you ask
me, I don’t think these kids should be
working, but there are cultural and
social circumstances [in Mexico] rooted
in poverty and scarcity.”
In a country where nearly half of the
population scrapes by on less than $4 a
day, any income source is welcome in
millions of households, even if it
hinges on the goodwill of a tipping
customer. And Wal-Mart did not invent
the bagger program that, as a written
statement from the company notes,
pre-dates the firm’s arrival in Mexico,
nor is it alone within the country’s
retail sector in benefiting from the
toil of unpaid adolescents. But in
Mexico City, for example, the 4,300
teenagers who work in Wal-Mart’s retail
stores free of charge dwarf similar
numbers laboring unpaid for Mexican
competitors like Comercial Mexicana
(715) and Gigante (427). Although
Wal-Mart’s worldwide code of ethics
expressly forbids any “associate” from
working without compensation, the
company’s Mexican subsidiary asserts
that the grocery baggers “cannot be
considered workers.” The Mexico City
government’s top labor official
dismisses that contention as so much
corporate hogwash. “To my mind, that is
not an accurate description because the
bagger is providing a service on the
store’s premises that benefits the
company by serving the customer better,”
argues Federal District Labor Secretary
Benito Mirón Lince. “In economic terms,
Wal-Mart does have the capability to pay
the minimum wage [of less than $5 a
day], and this represents an injustice.”
Certainly, Wal-Mart’s bottom line is
healthy. Wal-Mart de Mexico reported net
earnings of $1.148 billion in 2006 and
$280 million in profits in the second
quarter of this year, a 7 percent
increase in real terms over the same
period last year. Buoyed by the handsome
bottom-line results of the preceding 12
months, Wal-Mart de Mexico Chief
Executive Eduardo Solórzano announced
plans in February to add 125 new stores
and restaurants to its existing network
of 893 retail establishments during the
course of 2007. That ambitious expansion
plan will represent new investment
totaling nearly a billion dollars,
according to company spokesmen.
And in its defense, Wal-Mart says it
fully complies with a 1999 agreement
covering the teenaged baggers that the
Mexico City municipal government
negotiated with the Supermarkets and
Department Stores Association of Mexico.
The company also says it goes beyond the
obligations of that accord, awarding
bonuses twice a year to baggers who
maintain high grades in school and also
providing accident insurance that covers
the kids not only when they are on duty,
but also when they are en route between
home and workplace. The company’s
written statement cited a study
conducted by the Mexican government and
a U.N. agency that found that teenagers
participating in the baggers’ program
were less likely to use illegal drugs
than peers who panhandled or hawked
merchandise on city streets.
Wal-Mart says the bagger program was
designed “in accordance with the
International Labor Organization’s (ILO)
guidelines.” That’s questionable:
Article 2 of the ILO’s Convention 138
specifically prohibits the employment of
14-year-old children. (When asked by
NEWSWEEK specifically about this clause,
a Wal-Mart spokesman said in a written
response: “With respect to your
questions about the ILO, I repeat that
we subscribe to an agreement signed
between the Supermarkets and Department
Stores Association of Mexico and Mexican
labor officials. I suggest you share
your doubts with Mexican authorities as
to whether the [1999] accord [with the
Mexico City municipal government] is in
line with ILO guidelines.”) A study
conducted by three student researchers
at the Autonomous University of Mexico
documented violations of the 1999
agreement at a Wal-Mart Supercenter
store in southern Mexico City. These
included inadequate training and forcing
youngsters to work a double shift,
thereby exceeding the six-hour limit per
day established by the accord. Then
again, things could be a lot worse. In
February 2005, Wal-Mart agreed to pay
the U.S. Labor Department $135,540 in
civil money penalties to settle charges
of 24 child-labor violations. Some of
the accusations involved minors who
operated forklifts, chain saws and other
potentially dangerous equipment.
Stuffing groceries into plastic bags
would seem considerably less hazardous.