View Full Version : AsdaWalmart To Create 12,000 Jobs Over Five Years
arista
07-04-2014, 10:46 AM
"Asda is to create 12,000 jobs over five
years as part of its latest UK expansion plans.
The announcement was made on a visit
to the UK by parent company Walmart's chief executive,
Doug McMillon, as he showed Prime Minister
David Cameron around an Asda store in London.
Following the visit to the operation in Clapham Junction,
Mr McMillion said: "It has been a pleasure to
meet with the Prime Minister today
and reaffirm Walmart’s commitment to investing in the UK."
http://news.sky.com/story/1238350/asda-to-create-12000-jobs-over-five-years
http://media.skynews.com/media/images/generated/2014/4/7/300876/default/v1/asda-1-522x293.jpg
Some Good News
Ruining small businesses...
arista
07-04-2014, 10:53 AM
Ruining small businesses...
No they are going under anyway.
arista
07-04-2014, 10:59 AM
That's no excuse.
Tesco are the biggest have a go them
thesheriff443
07-04-2014, 11:11 AM
Tesco are the biggest have a go them
have you got shares in asda, arista?
arista
07-04-2014, 11:14 AM
have you got shares in asda, arista?
No.
Tesco are the biggest have a go them
In this country but around the world Walmart is the guiltiest company for doing this.
Crimson Dynamo
07-04-2014, 11:19 AM
I prefer Aldi
its better and cheaper
arista
07-04-2014, 11:26 AM
I prefer Aldi
its better and cheaper
Aldi and Lidl and Morrisons are all good as well
Many of the special offers in AsdaWalmart
are cheaper than Aldi and every store
arista
07-04-2014, 11:27 AM
In this country but around the world Walmart is the guiltiest company for doing this.
This is About the UK
joeysteele
09-04-2014, 10:44 PM
I wonder how they are creating them,since I was told by some of the staff in the ASDA I use, that they were now looking for other jobs, as staff, only from beneath Supervisors down, are having at least 3 hours taken off their working week as to hours guaranteed and others who haven't been there long are going onto zero hours contracts.
It would seem ASDA is cleverly planning the taking on more staff while making the savings as to cost of new employees first.
Not a bad thing overall but hard lines on the staff who are losing in excess of £20 a week from their wages.
Nedusa
10-04-2014, 06:04 AM
You would think there are quite enough supermarkets already fighting for market share. Yet here we have Walmart/Asda planning to open yet more.
Where is all this demand coming from ? Where is all this money coming from, are there thousands of new manufacturing jobs which in turn generate more wages for people to spend.No not that I'm aware of, so where is this demand coming from.
Perhaps it is simply a large organisation like Walmart trying to buy existing market share by offering yet cheaper, low quality Chinese goods.
Not sure this is actually good news.
lostalex
10-04-2014, 06:53 AM
We need international labor laws and an international minimum wage. Why isn't the UN doing this?
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