Retail workers in the United States

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Former Governor of Pennsylvania Tom Wolf poses with retail workers

Retail workers are people who are employed by any form of retail store. Typically one of the first jobs people work in, many retail workers are as young as 14.[1] The jobs of a typical retail worker include processing customers payments, and helping customers around the store, and little training is required.[2]

Background[edit]

In 2017, over 12,000 physical stores closed due to factors including over-expansion of malls, rising rents, bankruptcies, leveraged buyouts, low quarterly profits outside holiday binge spending, delayed effects of the Great Recession,[3] and changes in spending habits. American consumers have shifted their purchasing habits due to various factors, including experience-spending versus material goods and homes, casual fashion in relaxed dress codes, as well as the rise of e-commerce,[4] mostly in the form of competition from juggernaut companies such as Amazon.com and Walmart. A 2017 Business Insider report dubbed this phenomenon the "Amazon effect," and calculated that Amazon.com was generating greater than 50% of the growth of retail sales.[5] Dissenting economists and experts asserted that recent retail closures are a market correction, suggesting that "retail apocalypse" is a misleading phrase that instills insecurity in the 16 million retail workers in the U.S.[6]

Beginning in 2021, many retail workers began leaving their jobs than there were being hired, mostly in part due to burnout, stress, and other hindering factors on workers' mental health, as well as wage stagnation amid rising cost of living, limited opportunities for career advancement, hostile work environments, lack of benefits, inflexible remote-work policies, and long-lasting job dissatisfaction,[7] in a massive loss of jobs known as the Great Resignation.[8][9][10][11]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Bureau, US Census. "Retail Jobs Among the Most Common Occupations". Census.gov.
  2. ^ "Retail Sales Workers : Occupational Outlook Handbook: : U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics". www.bls.gov.
  3. ^ Thompson, Derek (April 10, 2017). "What in the World Is Causing the Retail Meltdown of 2017?". The Atlantic. Retrieved April 10, 2017.
  4. ^ "These haunting photos of the retail apocalypse reveal a new normal in America". Business Insider. 24 March 2017. Archived from the original on 8 April 2017.
  5. ^ Taylor, Kate (1 November 2017). "One statistic shows how much Amazon could dominate the future of retail". Business Insider. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  6. ^ Bernstein, Corinne. "retail apocalypse". whatis.com. Tech Target.
  7. ^ Serenko, A. (2023). "The Great Resignation: The great knowledge exodus or the onset of the Great Knowledge Revolution?" (PDF). Journal of Knowledge Management. 27 (4): 1042–1055. doi:10.1108/JKM-12-2021-0920.
  8. ^ "Why are more retail workers quitting their jobs? - RetailWire".
  9. ^ Parker, Kim; Horowitz, Juliana Menasce (March 9, 2022). "Majority of workers who quit a job in 2021 cite low pay, no opportunities for advancement, feeling disrespected". Pew Research Center.
  10. ^ Goldberg, Emma (May 13, 2022). "All of Those Quitters? They're at Work". The New York Times. Archived from the original on May 13, 2022.
  11. ^ Lambert, Thomas E. (January 2023). "The Great Resignation: A Study in Labor Market Segmentation". Forum for Social Economics. doi:10.1080/07360932.2022.2164599.