crednews is the original content division of cred.ai

the original content division of cred.ai

Walmart to Raise Pay for 425,000 Employees

Walmart to Raise Pay for 425,000 Employees

Walmart workers will soon see a bump in their paychecks to an average above $15 an hour, which will impact approximately 425,000 employees, the chain’s executives just announced, according to CNBC.

Walmart is the largest private employer nationwide with around 1.5 million employees. Executives say the company plans to continue to provide opportunities for its workers. Around 75 percent of its management started as hourly employees.

“We will raise our starting wage over time, and I think our history proves that,” Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said.

Hourly pay at Walmart is based on where a store is located. Given the past year where Walmart has witnessed toilet paper shortages and a huge increase in online traffic, store management expects business to return to normal sometime this year, according to Bloomberg.

The company’s new starting rates will fall between $13 and $19 an hour. While the chain prepares to spend more money on salaries this year, executives say they will also invest about $14 billion on automation and the supply chain, among other expenses.

That is a jump from the $10.3 billion the company spent on capital expenditures last year. Target and Amazon have already raised their starting wage to $15 an hour for their workers.

President Biden has also stressed his desire that the federal minimum wage be increased to $15 an hour in order to help more American households rise above the poverty line. Alongside Congress, he’s looking at raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour from the current rate of $7.25 an hour.

share this story

© crednews a division of cred.ai

cred.ai originals

latest posts

Egg prices are cracking under pressure as a new wave of avian influenza, commonly known as bird flu, sweeps through U.S. poultry farms. The highly pathogenic H5N1 virus has…
For years, renters have been at the mercy of an unforgiving market—sky-high prices, bidding wars for basic apartments, and landlords dictating the terms. But in 2025, the tide is…
In the age-old battle to protect Italy’s culinary crown jewels, parmesan producers have unleashed a new, high-tech weapon: microchips. Tiny transponders, no bigger than a grain of salt, are…

view the code through your phone’s camera
app and click the link that appears.
click the  X  or “esc” to close.