Glen Kessler, the Washington Post fact checker, reviewed Bernie Sanders’ claim that the Walton family makes more money in one minute than their average Walmart employee in one year. He said that Senator Sanders was right.
The difference is that the average Walmart worker has to go to work to earn money. The Waltons just sit still and get richer by the minute.
Kessler writes:
“The Walton family makes more money in one minute than Walmart workers do in an entire year. This is what we mean when we talk about a rigged economy.”
— Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), in a tweet, Feb. 14, 2019
This tweet from the campaign Twitter account of Sanders, a potential 2020 presidential candidate, caught our eye. Whether this is a definition of a rigged economy is a matter of opinion, but we were curious whether his factoid was right — does the Walton family make as much money in a minute as the company’s workers make in a year?
Let’s take a look.
The Facts
The Sanders campaign acknowledged that the information in the tweet came from a union-backed website known as Making Change at Walmart. The math behind this factoid is pretty simple and easily confirmed with documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Though Walmart is a publicly traded company, more than 50 percent of its shares are in the hands of the Walton family — 51.11 percent, to be precise. These shares are controlled primarily through two entities: Walton Family Holdings Trust and a holding company, Walton Enterprises. Members of the Walton family also have shares they control individually.
The three most prominent members of the family are Jim, S. Robson (Rob) and Alice, each estimated to be worth about $46 billion. They are the surviving children of Sam Walton, co-founder of the company. Other members of the family include Ann Walton Kroenke and Nancy Walton Laurie, children of Bud Walton, the other co-founder; Christy Walton, the widow of one of Sam’s sons; and 10 grandchildren (such as Lukas, worth about $16 billion, and Steuart, who is on the company’s board of directors).
When you add it up, the Walton family controls 1,508,965,874 shares out of 2,952,478,528 total shares outstanding, according to the company’s 2018 proxy statement.
Walmart’s most recent quarterly dividend was 52 cents a share, or $2.08 a year.
In other words, the Walton family earns $3,138,649,017.92 just in dividends a year, before adding in income from salaries, director’s fees and so forth. Yep, that’s more than $3.1 billion.
We have no idea how many hours a week members of the Walton family work on business, but a standard workweek is 40 hours, or 2,080 hours a year. That works out to $1.51 million an hour — or more precisely, $25,149 a minute.
By contrast, the union-backed website says, “at $9/hour, Walmart workers make less than $16,000/year working 34 hours per week, which is Walmart’s definition of full-time.”
Payscale says the average Walmart wage is $12 an hour, including managers, with cashiers earning $9.97 and sales associates earning $10.40. Walmart has previously told The Fact Checker that an entry-level worker earns $11 an hour.
For the sake of argument, let’s give these workers a 40-hour week. Walmart considers 34 hours full-time, which means that’s when workers can qualify for extra benefits, but under the law it has to start paying overtime when work exceeds 40 hours in a week. During holiday seasons, Walmart has been giving extra hours to existing workers rather than hiring seasonal workers. So a 40-hour week seems reasonable as a baseline.
Cashiers: $20,738 a year
Sales associates: $21,632 a year
Entry-level worker (Walmart figure): $22,880 a year
Walmart average (Payscale): $24,960 year
Walton family: $25,149 a minute
Even under a 40-hour metric, the Walton family still earns more in a minute than Walmart employees do in a year.
While the Walmart workers making $20,000 to $25,000 a year may pay little in income taxes or even qualify for the earned income tax credit, we should note that dividend income is taxed at a much lower rate than ordinary income. (This lower tax rate applies to “qualified dividends,” which would apply to the Walmart family holdings.)
The Waltons will have to pay only 20 percent tax on dividend income, compared with a 37 percent tax rate on annual income above $612,000 — so their taxes are almost cut in half. The workers will pay the 6.2 percent Social Security tax on all of their income, while the Waltons will stop paying any Social Security tax once their income exceeds $132,900. (There is no income limit on the 1.45 percent Medicare tax.)
In other words, dividend income is much more valuable on an after-tax basis than ordinary income.
A Walmart spokesman declined to comment.
The Pinocchio Test
Even assuming a 40-hour week, the average Walmart worker earns less in a year than the Walton family earns in a minute just from dividends paid on the family’s stock holdings. It’s an astonishing statistic, and it happens to be correct. Sanders thus earns the coveted Geppetto Checkmark. Regular readers know that we reserve this rating for claims that are unexpectedly true — and that’s certainly the case here.
Geppetto Checkmark


BRAVO!
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Let’s start with a tax code that would let them “earn” an average employee’s annual salary in one hour or one day. I can hear it already, “SOCIALISM!” (To be enunciated like Dug’s line from the movie Up, “Squirrel!”)
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I blasted KMOX radio (they remain very good in carrying Cardinal Baseball) for having a relatively clueless morning host named Charles Brennan present Gary Ritter of St. Louis University as some sort of education expert….giving him 20 minutes to brag about how SLU had 1 million dollars to give away, all over Missouri, to help guide school districts on how they should be doing things….(just google him, and find out how smart he actually is). Not once did the host or the guest mention……they received the million dollars from the Walton family……a huge amount of money to spend with the goal of pushing their privatization agenda. I am sure other states also received some gifts…..probably larger than what it took to buy influence in Missouri. So—they sat around for ten or fifteen minutes waiting to rack that much loot up?
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Ritter was bought.
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How about this? Utah’s funding for schools DROPPED last year, even though the number of students increased. It explains why I have 40 kids per class.
https://www.ksl.com/article/46494702/utah-k-12-education-funding-drops-for-first-time-in-7-years-report-states
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We need a new definition for the word billionaire as someone that has too much money and refuses to share with others. All of the above verified statements about the Waltons do not even account for the other assorted loopholes and tax avoidance strategies that their raft of tax accountants enable them to exploit each year. Our system is rigged because the 1% are pulling the strings.
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Amazon made over $25 billion in corporate profits and paid no federal taxes.
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“Whether this is a definition of a rigged economy is a matter of opinion….”
Really? Unless Kessler can refute why this is not a definition of a rigged economy or he can give a better example, I’d say that’s about as perfect a definition as there is. What more would Kessler need to convince him the economy is rigged?
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If you read Kessler’s article, he concludes that Bernie was correct and gives him the highest rating for True: a Geppetto.
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Bernie is correct.
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General Motors is getting a $104 million tax refund on over $11 billion in corporate profits in 2018.[1]
Amazon is getting a $129 million tax refund on similar profits.
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I don’t think the Walton family is doing a lot of nothing. I think they have too much free time to plot how they are going to end up ruling the country and then the entire world.
Their biggest obstacle might not be the working class. It is all those other billionaire oligarchs with the same agenda. Eventually, the billionaires will end up fighting each other just like the kings of old did when kings ruled most of the world.
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Sending donation to the Sanders campaign in short order. How much? $27, of course!
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Correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe that I read somewhere that the campaign raised $1.2 million on the first day he announced.
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Six million in the first 24 hours!
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The calculation also means that the average Walmart worker would have to work over 120 thousand years to make as much as the Walton family in 1 year.
This also means, the Waltons work 120 thousand times harder than their, say, cashiers.
On the other hand, I am happy to report that the collective income of the 2 million Walmart employees is more than what Waltons make.
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Diane Ravitch’s success-
Democrats have abandoned the promotion of Silicon Valley and its anti-democracy, anti-public schools plutocrats. Obama cozied up to Big Tech and we saw the result. The two-faced Sandberg, Z-berg and Gates worked against the 99% while mouthing b.s. to divert attention from their oligarchy.
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YEP!!!! Crony capitalism beats socialism every time.
{Beats us over the head that is.}
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