Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Idiot watch: Clueless professor says Wal-Mart not a jobs engine

In late 2006 Chicago's first Wal-Mart opened. Yesterday the local NPR affiliate interviewed University of Illinois-Chicago's University of Illinois-Chicago's David Merriman, who heads the school's economics department, who had this to say about possible Wal-Mart expansion in Chicago:

It won't fundamentally change the total amount of employment in the city. And I think that policymakers shouldn't see Wal-Mart as a panacea for employment problems.

Merriman said that 300 jobs were lost in surrounding zip codes after Chicago's Wal-Mart opened.

Gee, didn't a recession start about a year later?

As for the people who shop at that Wal-Mart, they are paying less for their goods than they did before. As I wrote last night, much of Chicago is a "food desert," an area where there are no supermarkets offering fresh and inexpensive food products.

David Merriman, another clueless expert.

Related post:

Proposed South Side Wal-Mart: Alderman and unions prefer "no wages" unless they get their way

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