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 Wal-Mart announces that it has ethics, principles
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Nickelless
Administrator


USA
5580 Posts

Posted - 10/23/2008 :  04:47:27  Show Profile Send Nickelless a Private Message
At least in China.

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Wal-Mart announced Wednesday in Beijing that it would require manufacturers supplying goods for its stores to adhere to stricter ethical and environmental standards, the latest effort by the world's biggest retailer to answer criticism of its business practices.

At a gathering of more than 1,000 suppliers, Chinese officials and advocacy groups, Wal-Mart executives revealed a new supplier agreement that would require manufacturers to allow outside audits and to adhere to specific social and environmental criteria. The agreement will be phased in beginning in January, Wal-Mart said.

The changes signal a move by Wal-Mart away from intermittent transactions with many suppliers toward longer-term arrangements with a smaller group of manufacturers. Wal-Mart is betting that using its buying power this way can help keep prices low even as it keeps a closer eye on its suppliers.

Wal-Mart, long criticized for its treatment of workers in the United States and its ostensible willingness to overlook violations abroad, has in recent years offered a series of environmental and labor initiatives. A Beijing meeting now under way is the company's first "sustainability summit."

By next year, Wal-Mart will start keeping close track of the factories from which its products originate, even if the products pass through many hands. By 2012, Wal-Mart will require suppliers to source 95 percent of their production from factories that receive the highest ratings in audits of environmental and social practices.

The agreement includes a ban on child labor, forced labor and pay below the local minimum wage.

"Meeting social and environmental standards is not optional," Lee Scott, Wal-Mart's chief executive, said at the Beijing meeting. "I firmly believe that a company that cheats on overtime and on the age of its labor, that dumps its scraps and its chemicals in our rivers, that does not pay its taxes or honor its contracts, will ultimately cheat on the quality of its products. And cheating on the quality of products is the same as cheating on customers."

To ensure that suppliers are making changes, Wal-Mart said it would require three levels of audits: from the vendors themselves, from an outside party and from Wal-Mart, which will initiate more of its own random, unannounced audits.

Wal-Mart said the audits would assess factory working conditions as well as compliance by manufacturers with standards regarding air pollution, wastewater discharge, management of toxic substances and disposal of hazardous waste.

Environmental and labor groups that follow Wal-Mart said the retailer had a mixed history when it came to the environment and labor practices, and that sometimes the company's goals were lofty, while the measurable outcomes were less so.

In the 1990s it came to light that workers at factories producing Kathie Lee Gifford clothing for Wal-Mart were subjected to inhumane conditions. Last year, two nongovernmental organizations said abuse and labor violations, including child labor, occurred at 15 factories that produce or supply goods for Wal-Mart and other retailers. In June the U.S. government and the state of Oklahoma filed a complaint in federal court claiming that Wal-Mart and other companies dumped hazardous waste in Oklahoma City. In Bangladesh, it was charged that factory workers were made to work 19-hour shifts, with some bringing home just $20 a month.

Michael Green, executive director of the Center for Environmental Health, a watchdog group in Oakland, California, said he believed that Wal-Mart's effort to improve the practices of its suppliers began as a program to counter public-relations damage.

"I think what happened along the way is some people there actually got convinced," he said. "It became more than a sophisticated PR stunt, but something they believed in."

However, without knowing the specifics of Wal-Mart's new plan, Green said it would not be easy sledding. Suppliers under pressure to offer the company the lowest prices are likely to have an incentive to cheat, he noted, and outside auditors may not want to report violations for fear of losing a lucrative Wal-Mart contract.

Additionally, tracing the origins of all the working parts that go into a single toy, for instance, is difficult because it involves multiple factories.

Still, groups that have criticized Wal-Mart were attending the meeting in Beijing to hear the company's plans.

In an interview by telephone from Beijing on Tuesday night, Scott said that Wal-Mart might offer longer-term agreements to suppliers willing to make the big investments needed to live up to its environmental demands.

The company said that within China, which has major environmental problems, Wal-Mart would aim by 2010 to cut water use in half in all stores, design and open a prototype store that used 40 percent less energy, and reduce energy use in existing stores by 30 percent.

"People will judge us," Scott said, "based on the results."


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Delawhere Jack
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
1680 Posts

Posted - 10/23/2008 :  05:22:22  Show Profile Send Delawhere Jack a Private Message
I get my underwear a Walmart...
Let me tell you something Raymond, Walmart Sucks!

Last time I went in a Walmart, I felt like I'd walked into a third world nation.

"Educate and inform the whole mass of the people... They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty." Thomas Jefferson

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NotABigDeal
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
3890 Posts

Posted - 10/23/2008 :  06:20:52  Show Profile Send NotABigDeal a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by Delawhere Jack

I get my underwear a Walmart...
Let me tell you something Raymond, Walmart Sucks!

Last time I went in a Walmart, I felt like I'd walked into a third world nation.



That's no lie. Delawhere Jack, I like you more and more everyday.

Deal

Live free or die.
Plain and simple.

"If you love wealth more than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, depart from us in peace. We ask not your council or your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you. May your chains rest lightly upon you and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen."
- Samuel Adams
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Steiner
Penny Collector Member



Canada
278 Posts

Posted - 10/23/2008 :  09:07:58  Show Profile Send Steiner a Private Message
I would not walk across the street to spit on a Wal Mart.

I only like to shop at mom and pop shops. I am willing to pay a little extra for service and a smile.

Steiner

Steiner
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Ant
Penny Hoarding Member



USA
894 Posts

Posted - 10/23/2008 :  12:16:21  Show Profile Send Ant a Private Message
Wal-Mart. *shudder*

Not to get too touchy feely, but the aura of those stores and the shoppers and employees in there disturbs me. Everyone seems so hopeless and angry.

ETA: It's not because it's a discount store. I go to Goodwill and Big Lots all the time and don't catch that vibe.

Lovely dimes, the liveliest coin, the one that really jingles. --Truman Capote

Coins are the metallic footprints of the history of nations. --William H. Woodin

Edited by - Ant on 10/23/2008 12:17:16
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Bluegill
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
1964 Posts

Posted - 10/23/2008 :  18:08:37  Show Profile Send Bluegill a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by Ant

Wal-Mart. *shudder*

Not to get too touchy feely, but the aura of those stores and the shoppers and employees in there disturbs me. Everyone seems so hopeless and angry.

ETA: It's not because it's a discount store. I go to Goodwill and Big Lots all the time and don't catch that vibe.



You noticed that too?

I will not shop there. I did a few times in the past. When I did, I came out feeling soiled. There is a certain energy in there that I do not like being immersed in.

Their prices aren't that much cheaper than elsewhere. Definitely not enough to justify the self degregation.

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