FILE PHOTO-A we're-hiring sign is posted outside of a Target store in Sausalito, California in 2019. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) NEW YORK - Workers at Target stores and distribution centers in places like New York, where competition for finding and hiring staff is the fiercest, could see starting wages as high as $24 an hour this year.The Minneapolis-based discount retailer said Monday that it will adopt minimum wages that range from $15 to $24 an hour, with the highest pay going to hires in the most competitive markets.
It currently pays a universal starting wage of $15 an hour.The new starting wage range is part of a company plan to spend an additional $300 million on its labor force this year that will also include broader, faster access to health care coverage for its hourly workers"The market has changed," said Target CEO Brian Cornell in an interview with The Associated Press. "We want to continue to have an industry-leading position."RELATED: Target offering debt-free education program for employeesTarget set a new marker for the retail industry back in 2017 when it announced it would increase hourly wages to $15 by 2020.
But U.S. labor-market dynamics have changed during the pandemic, with many employers facing severe worker shortages. And many of Target’s rivals are now paying a minimum of $15 per hour or more.Target, which has roughly 1,900 stores and 350,000 employees in the U.S., noted that the turnover rate among its employees is now actually lower than before the pandemic.
The retailer also said that it was able to exceed its goal of hiring 100,000 seasonal workers at its stores and 30,000 in its supply chain network across the country throughout the 2021 holiday season.