Wal-Mart Is Rolling Out The Robots After Raising Minimum Wage

Via ZeroHedge

Offering yet another lesson in how raising the minimum wage can destroy jobs, particularly for the most poorly compensated workers whom activists had intended to help, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday that Wal-Mart is deploying robots to carry out mundane tasks like mopping its floors and tracking inventory as it seeks to cut down on labor costs after raising wages last year, while also expanding into new services like grocery delivery.

Wal-Mart, which is the largest employer in the US, said at least 300 stores will introduce machines that scan shelves for out-of-stock products. Meanwhile, so-called “autonomous floor scrubbers” will be deployed in 1,500 stores, and conveyor belts that automatically scan and sort products as they are loaded off of trucks will more than double to 1,200. Another 900 stores will install 16-foot-high towers that will allow customers to pick up their online grocery orders without interacting with humans.

RobotsOne of Wal-Mart’s automated shelf scanners

Of course, Wal-Mart tried to portray the robots not as job killing machines, but as tools to help free up employees to do other things like pack groceries for its delivery service. But since grocery delivery is still a business in search of a sustainable business model, as WSJ pointed out last month, these tasks will likely soon be automated, too.

The company said the addition of a single machine can cut a few hours a day of work previously done by a human, or allow Walmart to allocate fewer people to complete a task, a large saving when spread around 4,600 U.S. stores. Executives said they are focused on giving workers more time to do other tasks, and on hiring in growing areas like e-commerce.

Instead, Walmart is spending to battle Amazon.com Inc. and serve more shoppers buying online. Walmart has hired around 40,000 store workers to pick groceries from shelves to fulfill online orders. The company is also raising wages, adding worker training, and buying e-commerce startups.

Store workers spend two to three hours a day driving a floor scrubber through a store using the manual machines, said a company spokesman last year. The automatic conveyor belts cut the number of workers needed to unload trucks by half, from around eight to four workers, said executives at a company presentation last June.

“With automation we are able to take away some of the tasks that associates don’t enjoy doing,” said Mark Propes, senior director of central operations for Walmart US. “At the same time we continue to open up new jobs in other things in the store.”

Brain Co., which makes the software that powers Wal-Mart’s floor scrubbers, described a workplace where machines and humans would work in harmony as “operational partners.” And in a tight labor market, it’s difficult for employers to fill some of these low wage positions.

“It’s very hard for employers to get the workforce they need,” Mr. Duffy said. “None of the customers we’re working with are using our machines to reduce their labor costs; they’re using them to allow their teams, their janitorial teams, to perform higher-value tasks.”

Retailers and other companies that hire large numbers of low-skilled hourly workers are increasingly looking to automation as they face higher labor costs and aim to improve retention amid the lowest unemployment in decades. Target Corp. added machines to count cash to backrooms of stores last year, following a similar move by Walmart.

Last week Target said it has raised starting wages for store workers to $13 an hour and has previously said it will raise starting wages to $15 next year. Last month, Costco WholesaleCorp. raised starting wages for U.S. and Canadian store workers to $15. Amazon did the same for U.S. workers last year.

Walmart raised starting wages for store workers to $11 last year. Executives said at a recent investor conference that Walmart is keeping wages competitive by store and market.

Now if they could only teach the robots to hand out stickers and greet customers at the door…

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18 Comments
Crawfisher
Crawfisher
April 9, 2019 8:58 am

I did a quick estimate and Google’d some information:
Three employees to work 24 hours/day, at $15/hr, the equivalent of 3 employees/day for 365 days cost ~$131k/yr (+/-)
If the same equivalent employees also receive benefits (50% of base), the cost goes up to ~$197k/yr (+/-)
Higher end industrial robots cost $100k – $150k to purchase, and another $100k to $150k to engineer and install., (all in ~$250k). Robot annual O&M costs $10k/yr.

At $15/hr labor cost / 24 hrs/day, a robot can pay for itself in~1.3 to 1.9 years. After the payback period, the sustaining robot cost is $10k in O&M vs another $131k in labor. Plus you avoid the 25% turnover (national average)

These numbers are Google ball park, no wonder McDonalds, Walmart, etc are investing in robots.
I do not want to try and estimate AI replacing employees…..

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Crawfisher
April 9, 2019 12:20 pm

It is always a cost/benefit game. Until the government drove up the costs, the benefits of having humans outweighed the costs of the alternative. Although from what I have seen in the retail industry these days with regards to work ethic, etc. I am surprised that finding an alternative – any alternative – to the folks in the current labor pool, hasn’t been a higher priority far earlier than this.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
April 9, 2019 9:37 am

If Wendy’s hires robots, who’s going to put the fecal matter in Stucky’s burger to get even for his micro aggressions? Can they program robots to spot micro aggressions and recognize Stucky?

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Iska Waran
April 9, 2019 10:28 am

The robot has a built-in feces dispenser, and an ass-hole customer detector.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Iska Waran
April 9, 2019 11:41 am

Just dress them up as racoons. Problem solved.

Fiatman65
Fiatman65
  ILuvCO2
April 9, 2019 11:55 am

LOL!!! comment made my day!

TampaRed
TampaRed
April 9, 2019 10:06 am

note the repeated references to the tight labor market–
only 2 things will fix this,targeted immigration & modifying the fsa —

overthecliff
overthecliff
April 9, 2019 10:27 am

Even simple robots are smarter, more industrious,more willing an more reliable than what you see wearing a Walmart vest. This was going to happen with or with out $15.00/ hr minimum wage. It is the same as replacing picks and shovels with excavation equipment.

MMinLamesa
MMinLamesa
  overthecliff
April 9, 2019 11:05 pm

Fuck you asshole. People that I work with at work at Wal-Mart are nothing like what you envision. We work hard, do you think all of that merchandise & produce walks from the trucks to the fucking shelves?

Dutchman
Dutchman
April 9, 2019 10:27 am

The key to automation like this is packaging and bar coding. Look in the supermarket – even the fruit (like apples / citrus ) Have small stickers that can be read via character recognition.

Stucky
Stucky
April 9, 2019 11:12 am

Those robots will do just fine. Take a closer look at the picture. Did you notice that the robot is ….. white?

I am not a racist.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Stucky
April 9, 2019 11:23 am

Scientifically, they found the brown robots didn’t work, and stole the merchandise.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Dutchman
April 9, 2019 12:21 pm

Or were too lazy to work, despite having a full charge of electricity. And they would always pick fights with the other robots.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
April 9, 2019 12:17 pm

An employer can ONLY sustainably pay someone and equal or lower amount than the VALUE (yes, a highly subjective term) they deliver to the bottom line. If they are FORCED to do otherwise, there will ALWAYS be consequences elsewhere, up to and including the closing of the store, and all employee’s wages being reduced to $0.00 per hour.

Walmart employees are lucky that their store owners/managers are finding ways of keeping them employed while all this is going on in the marketplace.

You cannot overcome the LAWS of Economics with good intentions, government legislation, or wishful thinking.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  MrLiberty
April 9, 2019 1:51 pm

comment image

physh troutmann
physh troutmann
April 9, 2019 6:37 pm

r2d2, stop scanning my balls!

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  physh troutmann
April 9, 2019 6:48 pm

Be concerned if he tries to put your inventory on a different shelf, or tries to restock the sausage.

NoThanksIJustAte
NoThanksIJustAte
April 10, 2019 2:53 am

RELATED NEWS: Inspired by Wal-Mart Move Towards Robotics, Democratic Party Announces Roll Out of Idea to Stay Relevant Until 2050

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