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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper that considers the issues that have arisen from the attempts of Wal-Mart to bring their retail outlets to small localized communities across the nation. This paper suggests that communities must reflect on both the pros and cons of this kind of development before determining opposition or support. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Walmart2.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
recently for issues regarding the building of Wal-Mart stores in small localized communities and disputes with public groups have arisen, focusing on the economic impacts of large chain stores like
Wal-Mart. Although Wal-Mart has begun to focus on creating upscale outlets in more prosperous communities, like Princeton, NJ, and Mountain View, CA, it is clear that the continued creation
of Wal-Mart stores in rural and localized communities has been met with the greatest level of resistance (Anonymous (a), 1996). There are two basic areas of debate regarding
the influx of retailers like Wal-Mart into small local communities. Local leaders often see the building of a Wal-Mart store as a means of improving unemployment rates by adding
a significant number of retail jobs to the area, and an increase in tax revenues from the store itself. But the creation of the Wal-Mart store also increases revenues
for local contractors, including builders, plumbers and electricians, who create the building, and improve the overall economic status of the region for a period of time.
Opponents to the Wal-Mart developing reflect on the impacts of the large retailer on the quaint, small town image, and the transition of the purchasing base from small local business
owners to the Wal-Mart store. Many small businesses do not survive the creation of a large retailer in the area, and this also has definitive economic impacts for the
community that need to be considered when presenting fiscal evidence in support of the influx of the large retailer. Some smaller and more rural communities, that often base their economic
stability on elements like tourism, often focus on rejecting the plans of large retailers because they present an element of change that reduces the perceptions necessary to bring tourists to
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