Is Wal-Mart backing the wrong party?

  • Share
  • Read Later

Dan Gross wonders about Wal-Mart’s latest clumsy effort to help the Republicans:

Wal-Mart’s brass plainly believes—no, know—that a Republican president would be good for Wal-Mart, while a Democrat would be bad. Despite Clinton’s Arkansas roots, most Wal-Mart executives probably opposed Clinton in both his successful campaigns. But during his presidency, Wal-Mart’s stock more than tripled. By contrast, Wal-Mart executives polled in 2000 would have been exultant at the prospect of two George W. Bush terms, especially if they were to be coupled with mostly Republican control of the House and Senate. And yet this decade has been a lost one for Wal-Mart shareholders: In the Bush years, the stock hasn’t budged at all.

Yes, politics matters. But in the end, the macroeconomic climate matters a lot more. Wal-Mart’s success ultimately depends on whether the lower-income and middle-income customers on whom it depends are doing well or getting eaten up by stagnant incomes and rising costs for health care and gas. Here, again, the last two decades offer a pretty good contrast. In the 1990s, when a Democrat was in the White House, the rising economic tide lifted all boats (though not all boats equally), and Wal-Mart benefited. In this decade, the rising tide lifted only the yachts. The Bush years have been something of an economic disaster for people on the lower rungs of the income ladders. … It’s not all the fault of Bush or congressional Republicans, of course. But it’s pretty clear that the dominant fiscal and economic policies of the past eight years—massive tax cuts for the wealthy, economic royalism, hostility to labor, and neglect on health care—haven’t made things better for Wal-Mart customers.

Instead of asking whether a particular candidate or political party will be favorable to Wal-Mart’s labor-relations policies, the executives in Bentonville, Ark., should be asking whether the candidate or party will be good for Wal-Mart’s customers.

It’s a question that all of corporate America, or at least the part of corporate America that depends on American consumers for its profits, probably ought to be asking itself. Clearly, the Republican Party is friendlier to corporate executives on matters like taxes, regulation, and union-busting. But whether you think it’s the result of dumb luck or smart policy, it’s well-documented that Democratic administrations have delivered stronger, more widely shared economic growth than Republican ones since World War II. Which in the end, may deliver greater benefits to those corporate executives than, say, a lower income tax rate would.