

July 2, 2007
Kroger $1 Billion Stock Repurchase Program Leaves Workers Behind
Company Program Eliminates Key
Stakeholders from
Sharing Company
Success
Revenue
growth and profit levels are at an all time high for the Kroger Company.
Company
revenues and profits skyrocketed last year, with the company posting $3.5
billion in operating profits for 2006.
Kroger recently announced that it would divert resources into a program to
repurchase $1 billion of Kroger common stock. This repurchase program will
lift the value of the company shares and improve shareholder returns.
Clearly, the shareholders will benefit from Kroger’s good performance. In
addition, Kroger also announced that it will pay additional dividends to
shareholders on top of increasing its quarterly shareholder dividend by 15.4
percent on March 15, 2007. A $10,000 investment in Kroger two years ago
would be worth about $18,000 today – a return of 80 percent.
Kroger
executives also have benefited from the company’s good performance. The
Kroger board of directors awarded company CEO David Dillon $7.5 million in
salary, bonuses and stock options in 2006, an increase of $1.4 million -
more than a 17 percent raise over the previous year.
CEO
Dillon attributes much of the company’s success to employees, stating, “We
challenged our associates to help us improve our connection with customers.
They accepted the challenge and raised the bar, as [our] market share gains
clearly show.” And in fact, since last year Kroger grew its market share in
26 major metropolitan areas where non-union competitor Wal-Mart has a strong
presence.
But Kroger Refuses to Share
Success with Workers
Yet
employees—represented by the United Food and Commercial Workers Union—are
encountering Kroger proposals at the collective bargaining table that call
for restricting wage increases and would provide less than living wages and
undermine current health care benefits which already are inadequate to
provide a decent level of health security to its employees.
Kroger
has rewarded executives and shareholders, but refuses to treat its employees
fairly.
Three
years ago, UFCW members were forced to accept wage freezes and benefits
reductions on behalf of greater profitability for Kroger. In Southern
California, the adoption of a two-tier wage and benefit system resulted in
new hires earning less Health care coverage for employees dropped
dramatically, nearly 50 percent, leaving a number of workers and their
families, including children, vulnerable.
It’s past time for Kroger to
treat its employees fairly. Rewarding management for outstanding results is
sensible. Allowing shareholders, the owners of the company, to prosper
above and beyond what the market has seen to reward them by buying back
shares is always a questionable decision, as the money could be employed to
bolster operations and thereby enhance the value of their stock. But to
treat employees unfairly—the same employees who come to work day-in and
day-out and whose relationships with the customers are critical to Kroger’s
success—is morally wrong as well as a foolish business decision that
promotes the type of behavior leading to strikes and stoppages.
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