Boycott Amazon

What is wrong with using Amazon?

The ARB  would like you to boycott Amazon, a position share by Ethical Consumer magazine. But why shouldn’t you use Amazon? It’s a fair question. Amazon has achieved an unrivalled supremacy over the marketplace, but this near-monopoly wasn’t achieved without the usual unethical practices that are so common to the world’s biggest corporations. Here are a few reasons why Amazon deserve boycotting…

Amazon are Union Busters

Amazon have a little-reported, but undeniable record of preventing their work force from unionising. In 2001, Amazon.co.uk hired a US management consultancy organisation, The Burke Group, to assist in defeating a campaign by the Graphical, Paper and Media Union (GPMU, now part of Unite the Union) to achieve recognition in the Milton Keynes distribution depot. It was alleged that the company sacked four union members during the 2001 recognition drive and held a series of captive meetings with employees.

Also In 2001, 850 employees in Seattle were laid off by Amazon.com after a unionisation drive. The Washington Alliance of Technological Workers (WashTech) accused the company of violating union laws, and claimed Amazon managers subjected them to intimidation and heavy propaganda.

UK union organiser Peter Lockhart said: “Behind the shiny facade of Amazon and the internet are poor pay, poor conditions, poor communications and poor management. It is anything but ‘new age’ inside that distribution centre.”

According to Unite the Union, Amazon continues to this day to see trade union representation as illegitimate.

Guardian article link
Word Power article link

Amazon treat their staff appallingly

In December 2008, a Sunday Times reporter went undercover to their Marston Gate warehouse near Milton Keynes and uncovered the workers were:

– Warned that the company refuses to allow sick leave, even if the worker has a legitimate doctor’s note. Taking a day off sick, even with a note, results in a penalty point. A worker with six points faces dismissal.

– Made to work a compulsory 10½hour overnight shift at the end of a five-day week. The overnight shift, which runs from Saturday evening to 5am on Sunday, means they have to work every day of the week.

– Set quotas for the number of items to be picked or packed in an hour that even a manager described as “ridiculous”. Those packing heavy Xbox games consoles had to pack 140 an hour to reach their target.

– Set against each other with a bonus scheme that penalises staff if any other member of their group fails to hit the quota.

– Made to walk up to 14 miles a shift to collect items for packing.

-Given only one break of 15 minutes and another of 20 minutes per eight-hour shift and told they had to notify staff when going to the toilet. Amazon said workers wanted the shorter breaks in exchange for shorter shifts.

Meanwhile in Germany,Amazon was recently accused of using neo-Nazi guards to intimidate the workforce in its warehouse in Germany.

Sunday Times article link
The Sunday times link is now behind a paywall, so for those not signed up there’s some discussion and reference here :
Amazon U.K. accused of sweatshop conditions
Amazon.com’s holiday sweatshop horror
What Part of Rampant Consumerism do People Not Get?
Neo-Nazi guards oversee German Amazon workforce

Amazon squeeze publishers and writers

The prices on Amazon’s website may seem amazingly cheap, but these savings come primarily from publishers, who are squeezed for every penny, as Amazon forces them to supply them at rates so low that it leaves authors and publishers out of pocket – particularly damaging smaller publishing houses. Amazon’s dominance of the market means that publishers have little choice but to comply with their demands. Aside from the ethical considerations, this affects readers in reduced output from small presses, and diminished availability of radical titles.

Housmans has spoken to several publishers who have felt forced into offering huge discounts to Amazon, but who do not wish to go on record with their grievances. The less money publishing houses make, the less there is for writers, and it creates an even tougher environment to publish in.

This battle is now extending to ebooks, where Amazon are again fighting hard to maximise profits at the expense of publishers.

Amazon and eBooks article

Amazon are not cheap

Housmans cannot compete with Amazon on price, and nor would we want to. Amazon achieves its low prices by paying its workers the bare minimum and making it impossible for workers to unionise in order to struggle for better conditions. It also achieves its low prices by using its position of market dominance to squeeze small publishers, forcing them to offer their books to them for as little as possible, with the threat that if they don’t Amazon won’t stock them. The savings made by a customer using Amazon comes from the pockets of publishers, authors and Amazon staff.

Amazon want to monopolise the market

Amazon are a company on a mission: to completely dominate the online shopping marketplace. Not content with selling books, DVDs, music, DIY tools, electronic equipment and clothes, Amazon have also recently started selling groceries in bulk. But that’s not all – Amazon has also taken on online payment companies such as PayPal with its ‘Amazon Payments’ service, further extending its attempt to control all aspects of online retail. Monopolies are always a dangerous thing – the more power they have, the more they will use it get their own way at the expense of workers rights.

Amazon are tax dodgers, paying zero tax in the UK despite £7.5bn of annual sales

Extracted from an article in Ethical Consumer:

“What singles Amazon out as a consumer-facing tax avoider is not just its size and market power, but the fact that its whole business model appears to be built around tax avoidance as a way of competing on price.

The Guardian ran a series of articles on Amazon’s approach to tax in April this year. Evidence showed that the company which sold one in four books in the UK, and generated £7.5bn from sales here in the last three years, did so without attracting any corporation tax on the profits from those sales.(3)

This position was engineered by the transfer in 2006 of ownership of the main UK business to the Luxembourg-based company Amazon EU Sarl. Luxembourg is number three on the Tax Justice Network’s list of damaging secrecy jurisdictions.4 The Guardian estimated that the company may haveavoided paying a tax bill of around £100 million in the last three years.

The problem with Amazon’s approach is just as pronounced elsewhere. On May 25th this year, one hundred protesters gathered outside Amazon’s shareholder’s meeting in Seattle calling on Amazon to pay more taxes and treat its workers better.(5)

The world’s largest internet retailer collects sales taxes from only five out of fifty US states, exploiting a court ruling requiring a physical presence in a state for sales to be taxable.(6)

In order to escape this liability Amazon apparently “has a map of the US with each state coloured red, yellow or green. Executives travelling to red states need company permission before entering, in case their actions trigger laws that force Amazon to collect taxes there.”(6)

In 2008, Business Week found that Amazon paid a lower percentage of its profits in tax (around 4%) than 488 of the 500 biggest companies in the USA.(7)

And unsurprisingly, Amazon is not averse to using its profits to campaign against tax liabilities. In 2011, it apparently spent over $5 million collecting signatures to a proposition to amend a new sales tax law in California to its advantage.(8)”

Ethical Consumer are encouraging people to boycott Amazon, and also to emai them to change their practice. There is a form that makes it easiy to email that can be found here:
Amazon Action

Full article in Ethical Consumer

The Wikileaks Debacle

On 28 November 2010 ‘whistle-blowing’ website WikiLeaks and five major newspapers from Spain (El País), France (Le Monde), Germany (Der Spiegel), the United Kingdom (The Guardian), and the United States (The New York Times) started to simultaneously publish the first of 251,287 leaked confidential – but not top secret – diplomatic cables from 274 US embassies around the world, dated from 28 December 1966 to 28 February 2010.

Although, at the time of writing, no crime has been commited, or charge made, Amazon effectively forced WikiLeaks to dissapear off the net by stopping to host the site’s domain – all this after an intervention by an aide of U.S. Senator Joe Lieberman.

Lieberman is quoted as saying: “I will be asking Amazon about the extent of its relationship with WikiLeaks and what it and other web service providers will do in the future to ensure that their services are not used to distribute stolen, classified information.”

Guardian article WikiLeaks row: why Amazon’s desertion has ominous implications for democracy