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The
Impacts of Big Box Retail
It is easy, and perhaps appropriate to pick on Wal-Mart when
discussing the impact of big box retail. After all, they are
the biggest retailer and now the largest company in the world,
and the reality of Wal-Mart does not come even close to their
carefully crafted public persona. Unfortunately, Wal-Mart is
not the only culprit when it comes big box retail decimating
local economies.
The furious attacks on Wal-Mart have been a godsend for other
big box retailers. Social critics have largely ignored Target,
Home Depot, Lowe’s and others as they focus their wrath
on Wal-Mart. However, from a planning perspective, it is both
inappropriate and foolish to concentrate so much energy on one
retailer when in fact, any big box retail operation can have
an enormous impact on your community.
Sometimes the best deal isn’t the item with the lowest
price tag. In fact, sometimes the lowest price isn’t even
the lowest cost. We all know that a quality community is much
more than a place that has ready access to low cost shopping,
but that doesn’t stop some from drooling at the prospect
of saving 15 minutes of driving time to save 20 cents on the
bargain of the week. The problem is that big boxes aren’t
just about shopping. They can very fundamentally effect your
entire community and your wallet, as there are some surprising
back end costs that you may not be to happy to find that you
are paying.
Big box retailers have tremendous impacts on the fundamental
nature of communities. In some cases, those impacts are subtle
and it make take years to recognize their true nature. In others,
the effects are immediately evident. Below are some of the factors
that any responsible public official should address before considering
the appropriateness of a big box in their community.
There Really are Limits
Retail markets are limited in size and are dependent on the
health of the local economy. Consumer consumption is directly
tied to the amount of disposal income, not to the availability
of shopping opportunities. Big boxes do not create new markets:
they draw from the existing market base and from the established
merchants. Invariably, the introduction of a big box retailer
will seriously impact those merchants, with the loss of sales
forcing many to close up shop.
The impact of a big box is designed to be regional. They are
designed to be a draw within a 10 to 15 mile radius in suburban
settings and even further in less populated areas. A new big
box in one town will have a substantial impact on its neighbors.
In fact, in more rural areas, the impact on existing merchants
can grow in severity as one gets nearer to the edge of the
circle of influence of the big box.
Big box retailers are auto dependent and locate in areas with
prime road access. They draw people away from “Main
Street” America. Quaint town centers do not exist for
visual pleasure, they exist to support economic activity.
If there is no economic activity, you can bet that the town
center won’t be quaint for very long.
Multiplying Money
Money bounces and multiplies within the local economy. That
is, when you spend money with a local merchant, they will
in turn spend a portion of that money locally which supports
other merchants. The multiplier factor varies somewhat in
different studies but is generally considered to be between
2.3 and 2.7. Thus $100 that you spend actually generates between
$230 and $270 of local economic activity.
When you purchase from a big box, nearly all of the money
flows directly out of the local economy. None of the profits
stay locally and in many cases, nor do the salaries of the
employees. The reason is simple: in more affluent areas, local
residents are unwilling to work for the poverty level wages
offered by many of the big box retailers. Without a local
workforce, the retailers do exactly what the fast food industry
has done- that is, to “import” workers from the
cities through reverse commuting. Thus the salaries flow back
to the workers’ home locale and are not available to
further enhance the local economy.
Support your Local Businesses
Local businesses tend to be more employee friendly, hire more
people, hire more local residents, pay better salaries, and
offer better benefits than do big box retailers. The benefits
to the community are obvious and so are the losses if a big
box retailer forces a local merchant out of business.
What You Don’t Know Can Really Cost You
Only in some cases do big box retailers pay big property taxes.
In others, they are given tax breaks to locate in a particular
community that can relieve them of their tax burden for years.
This is simply insane and any elected official that offers
such a deal should voted out of office at the earliest possible
moment.
Big box retailers are fond of touting the positive impact
on taxes that the opening of one of their stores will have
on the local community. In many cases, such claims are vastly
overstated by the retailers. To evaluate the true impact of
a big box on ones community you must look at more than the
check the retailer will write to the local taxing authority(s).
It is absolutely critical to factor in the increased cost
of services that the big box will require as well as secondary
losses to the tax base.
New or expanded road systems are an enormous cost that accompanies
nearly every new big box and rarely do the retailers foot
the bill. Instead, it is government that make the “improvements”
with your tax dollars. Additional sewage capacity may well
be needed. Additional police services are often required and
represent an ongoing cost of significance. Taxpayer funded
off-site storm water management systems and/or flood control
measures may be required to counteract the enormous increase
in stormwater runoff that is produced by the acres of impervious
surface that result from big box development.
It is also critical to evaluate the potential loss to the
existing tax base. Local businesses pay sizable taxes as well
and as they start to fall to the pressure of the big box retailers,
so do the taxes that they pay. This serves to offset any tax
“windfall” that might have been promised when
the big box was trying to win approval. In cases where tax
incentives have been offered, this actually results in a negative
tax flow which must be made up by either reducing services
or increasing the taxes of the local residents.
Additionally, the taxes generated by local income taxes must
be considered. Not only will salaries (and the taxes paid
on these salaries) be lower when dominated by big boxes, but
there may be a sizable shift in taxes from one municipality
to another. For example, a big box on a highway in an adjacent
township may cause a substantial reduction in the tax revenues
of a nearby “Main Street” based town if the “Main
Street” retailers are forced out of business.
The list of potential costs to the community could go on and
on and in large part are situational. The most critical thing
to remember is that in all of these cases, you are paying
the bill. Your dollars are subsidizing a large corporation.
They are making money at your expense.
Therefore, it is our strong recommendation that the totality
of the cost be evaluated before any land development considerations
are discussed. Economic as well environmental impact statements
should be required and we would recommend that municipalities
include this requirement as part of their zoning ordinance.
When crafting the ordinance changes, care must be taken to
ensure the integrity of the reports. In other words, don’t
allow the retailer’s “experts” to prepare
the studies.
The Final Straw
The decimation of “Main Street” America during
the 1960s and 1970s is a well documented phenomena that resulted
from the growth of malls during that period. In many cases,
the integrity of once thriving towns has been lost forever.
In others, only the expenditure of enormous financial and
human resources has allowed for their resurgence. Communities
that have rebounded from the retail trends of the past are
once again faced with extinction as big box retailers shift
the retail center of gravity away from town centers to highway
access points.
As big box retailers draw the life blood out of the downtown
areas, one can only expect that they will degenerate with
all of the social implications that are associated with dying
towns. Vacant stores will replace thriving businesses and
the huge public investment spent on revitalization will ultimately
be wasted. To our knowledge, no one has yet calculated how
many tax dollars are likely to have been tossed out the window
on such failed efforts but it is important to recognize that
those are your dollars and that the cost is yours to pay.
Community Support is Essential
Big box retailers are great at supporting high visibility
NASCAR teams but they are decidedly stingy when it comes to
supporting the local community. In fact, the largest big box
retailer, Wal-Mart, also appears to be among the least generous
major companies in the United States, committing a very meager
.004% of its earnings to charitable causes.
This is a critical concept to understand. It is local business
that provide the bulk of financial support for many community
organizations. Kill off the local businesses and you cripple
your community organizations. Just look at the back of Little
League jerseys and you will begin to understand the significance.
While you are likely to see that a team is sponsored by “Jack’s
Auto Parts” you’ll have to look far and wide to
find one that is sponsored by “Wal-Mart”. When
Wal-Mart drives Jack’s out of business, who is going
to sponsor the team?
Think about all of the organizations and events that benefit
from the support of the local business community. Booster
clubs, PTA/PTOs, school bands, scouts, sport leagues, theater
groups, 4H and the list goes on. Sure, you may save a little
bit by shopping at a big box but if you don’t support
the businesses that support your organizations, don’t
cry alligator tears when you have to make the decision to
foot the bill yourself or let the organization die from lack
of financial resources.
Hurting Your Neighbors
Very few people would intentionally go out of their way to
make live miserable for their friends and neighbors but that
is exactly what happens when people shift their business from
local retailers to mass merchants. Local businesses fail and
the families that run them, sometimes for generations, face
financial ruin.
Money problems are a leading cause of marital discord and
it can often lead to the breakdown or even the breakup of
a family system. When big box retailers drive independent
merchants from a market, the implications are far greater
than merely the closing of a store. People are put out of
work and family crisises are initiated. The people affected
are your friends and neighbors. They are your children’s
classmates. They are fellow parishioners and community volunteers.
Their lives may be greatly impacted and those impacts are
very rarely positive.
Have They Got a Deal for You!
Everyone likes low prices but there is a hidden cost that
comes with those savings. Service and support decline, often
evaporating totally as does product quality. Big box retailers
frequently will hire or bring in special “teams”
for a store opening, bringing in more employees than will
ultimately staff the store. Their goal is to provide a positive
initial experience that will encourage shoppers to come back.
Once the opening period is over, the number and experience
level of the staff will be reduced. The result: the very positive
initial experiences are rarely duplicated over time.
Adding to the problem is the inordinately high employee turnover
that most big boxes encounter. Wal-Mart’s turnover rate
is among the worst in any industry group (somewhere in the
50 - 60% per year range), which results in an inexperienced
work force servicing customer needs. Unfortunately, by the
time many people realize that the “bargain” of
low prices is not quite the bargain that it appears to be,
the stores that actually did provide the level of service
that people desire are long gone and unlikely to ever return.
Likewise, once the businesses that actually provided service
to their customers disappear, so do many of the options that
were available to shoppers. Special orders and access to specialty
manufacturers becomes much more difficult. The product selection
and availability is dictated by high volume purchasing, not
personal taste.
News Flash!
Retail businesses are not in business to provide customer
service. They are in business to make money. To many local
businesses, service is a major part of their sales kit. They
service their customers because that is good way to bring
people into the store and to develop a client base. The client
benefits by having access to quality pre-sale advice, after
sale support and access to a wider product selection because
items can be special ordered and/or customized to meet the
particular client desires.
The services that one receives from a small business are not
free. They are expensive to provide. To properly provide customer
service requires an experienced and knowledgeable staff as
well as a much larger time commitment per client. The cost
to provide quality services are reflected in the price you
pay and not unexpectedly, many local retailers that provide
good service are more expensive than big box retailers because
providing that service is a real and tangible expense.
One of the easiest ways for a big box to increase their profit
margins is to eliminate service. By doing so, they can use
inexperienced staff and pay them poverty line wages. Nobody
expects quality sales help at a big box and the consumer is
on their own when making a product selection. If the consumer
makes a bad selection, then the cost of that decision must
be deducted from the money “saved” by shopping
at a big box. In the end, whether one actually pays less or
not is subject to some luck and a lot of debate. It really
boils down to “you get what you pay for.”
Who Cares if it Breaks as Long as it is Cheap
The issue of product selection and availability is of importance
to more than the end consumer, it is one that is vitally important
to the economy as a whole. Obviously, big boxes gain much
of their price advantage by bulk purchasing. This means that
their suppliers must be able to provide huge quantities of
a particular product and often at a price dictated by the
big box retailer. Consider the ramifications:
A. Much of the merchandise sold by big
box retailers is now imported. It has been estimated that
as much as 85% of the merchandise sold by Wal-Mart is foreign-made
and charges of inhumane conditions in sweatshops are rampant
throughout the industry.
Not only are there human rights issues that must be considered,
but the simple reality is that the buying habits of Americans
have fueled the surge in big box retail and it is costing
other Americans their livelihoods. The American textile
industry is but one example in that it provided the basis
for existence in many American towns for years. As an industry,
it has all but disappeared with the jobs it provided now
relegated to cheap offshore labor. There are real costs
associated with the migration of jobs to third world countries
and ultimately everyone who shops at a big box should be
cognizant of those costs when computing their “savings”
in the checkout line.
B. Smaller manufacturers find it difficult,
if not impossible, to market their products to big box retailers
and have relied on the local retailers to sell their wares.
When the local retailers are forced out of business by the
big boxes, the smaller manufacturers are very likely to
suffer serious financial consequences as their sales channel
disappears.
The outcome is wholly predictable. More businesses will
close as sales fall. More quality jobs will be lost. Product
options will become fewer and product quality will be reduced
as craftsmen are replaced with dollar-a-day laborers.
Ugly and Uglier
By any standard, most big box retail centers are ugly. Unfortunately,
when all is said and done they may not be the worst looking
thing around. When big boxes come to town, they often spell
the end to shops in existing retail centers. Abandoned commercial
buildings, whether on “Main Street” or at a strip
mall (which seem to fare particularly poorly) soon turn into
both a visual and actual blight on the community.
The financial viability of a retail area is reliant on the
success of all its components. As vacancies increase, the
ability of owners to maintain the property decreases with
the flow of rental income. As the quality of the property
decreases, so do the rental rates that can be charged and
the quality of the retail establishments occupying the space
are very likely to decline. Of particular concern is that
if a property owner is forced into bankruptcy then the maintenance
of the property becomes even more of an issue and its deterioration
often accelerates dramatically. Any given community must have
a “critical mass” of businesses in order to remain
viable and economically stable. With the introduction of big
boxes into a community and the resulting failure of small
businesses, a town may well lose its needed critical mass
of shops and services.
Small is Big
Every politician will tell you at every election that small
business are the backbone of America. Although it may sound
merely like vote getting rhetoric, it is true. Consider the
following statistics from the United States Small Business
Administration and then ask yourself if it is a good idea
to kill them off with superstores.
- there were approximately 22.9 million small businesses
in the U.S. in 2002
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- there were an estimated 550,100 new employer businesses
in 2002 - a 0.9 percent increase over the previous
year
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- small businesses hire a larger proportion of employees
who are younger workers, older workers, and workers
work part-time
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- provide approximately 75 percent of the net new
jobs added to the economy
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- represent 99.7 percent of all employers
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- employ 50.1 percent of the private work force
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- provide 40.9 percent of private sales in the country
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- account for 39.1 percent of jobs in high technology
sectors in 2001
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- account for 52 percent of private sector output
in 1999
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- represent 97 percent of all U.S. exporters
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Uglier Still
While the impact of a big box may result in the deterioration
of surrounding retail centers, big box abandonment is an issue
unto itself. The “shelf life” of big box stores
is relatively short (5-15 years) with older stores often replaced
by newer facilities erected by the same retailer within the
same market. The old stores are simply abandoned with little
opportunity for reuse.
There are a number of reasons for the high incidence of big
box abandonment. First, when a big box retailer decides to
“refresh” their market presence with an updated
store, it is cheaper for them to build a new facility than
it is retrofit the existing structure. The very nature of
big boxes makes them relatively inexpensive to erect and extremely
expensive to retrofit to an updated floor plan. Add to that
the reality that the construction related to any major facility
upgrade will seriously impact the sales of the store and it
makes economic sense (for the corporation, not the community)
to replace rather than rehabilitate an existing store.
The second factor that comes into play is the reality that
the only use for a big box building is for big box retail.
If a retailer decides to decommission a store and replace
it with a new one within the same market they are not going
to be anxious to lease the empty store to one of their competitors.
Their solution: leave the box empty.
Even if a noncompetitive retailer were “allowed”
to lease the property, in most cases they will be reluctant
to do so. Why? Most big box retailers have established a “certain
look” that clearly identifies a structure as one of
their stores. Whether you are in Oregon or Pennsylvania they
want you to be able to identify with their brand name simply
by looking at the building. Obviously, it is easier, and often
faster and cheaper, to achieve this type of branding by constructing
new facilities that reflect the corporate image of the retailer
than it is convert an existing facility built in another corporations
image.
Homogenizing America
Big Box retailers are concerned with promoting their image,
not with blending in with the local environment. In fact,
most big box stores bear absolutely no relationship to their
surroundings. From a marketing perspective, this is desirable.
You might not be able to tell if you are in New Jersey or
New Mexico but you can sure tell if you are in a Wal-Mart
or a Target.
Planners and sociologists are increasingly concerned with
the loss of a “sense of place,” referring to the
fact that every town is beginning to look like Any Town USA.
We all like to think that we are unique and that the communities
in which we live have their own defining character. That character
and the commitment to community is lost when it becomes impossible
to differentiate one town from another. The full implications
of this phenomena have yet to be studied but it is safe to
say that its ramifications will prove to be largely negative.
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