Mexico, USA: Who Will Pay the Price for Wal-Mart's Corruption?

This post is part of our International Relations & Security coverage.

There have been better times to be associated with Wal-Mart. In 2011, for example, it was named one of the top 10 most transparent corporations in Mexico [es]. Yet one of the world’s largest corporations has taken a hit after evidence surfaced that their Mexican subsidiary paid $24 million USD in bribes to Mexican officials between 2002 and 2005. According to an investigation by the New York Times published in April 2012, Wal-Mart kept this information quiet since 2005, when a former employee in Mexico blew the whistle.

Taking every opportunity to call out bad practices at the company, Wal-Mart reform advocacy and employee groups jumped on the scandal, calling on Wal-Mart’s CEO to resign in an online petition started by Organization United for Respect at Wal-Mart (Our Wal-Mart) on Change.org in May.

As the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) in the United States is more frequently enforced today than it has been for many years, attention now turns to how much Wal-Mart could be fined by US authorities. This is also likely to lead to questions concerning whether the bribes made a substantial contribution to Wal-Mart’s economic development, or whether profits were directly tied to the bribes

How the scandal played out in Mexico

President Calderon with Walmart CEO

President Calderon (right) met with Walmart CEO Michael T. Duke in Cartagena, Colombia in April 2012 and his office issued a statement and this photo.

A little more than a week prior to the New York Times report in April, the office of Mexican President Felipe Calderon released a photo of Calderon meeting with Wal-Mart CEO Michael T. Duke in Colombia. The Mexico bureau chief for McClatchy Newspapers, Tim Johnson writes in his blog:

They probably wish they could recall the photo now.

At that meeting, Calderon “congratulated Wal-Mart on its commitment to the environment by generating increasing amounts of clean energy” and praised the company for buying directly from Mexican farmers, his office said. Duke, for his part, declared that “Mexico is an example for the rest of the chain worldwide” according to the statement.

Walmart Mexico associates

Walmart Mexico associates attending lunch in Northwest Arkansas during the 2011 Walmart Shareholders' Meeting. Photo by Walmart Stores on flickr (CC BY 2.0)

Johnson writes that the president’s office issued a “bulletin” on April 23, after the bribery was revealed, that attempted to distance the federal government from the scandal by emphasizing that the bribes were to local and state functionaries. Calderon didn’t become president until after the alleged bribery took place.

Mexfiles analyses what impact the Wal-Mart scandal could have on the upcoming presidential elections, noting that the PAN Party candidate, whose party controlled the federal government at the time of the bribery (and still does) had not commented on the issue. Meanwhile her two leading opponents were calling for investigations. Mexfiles also notes that the Calderon administration passed new anti-trust laws and wonders whether Wal-Mart’s aggressive bribery and expansion practices could be considered unfair competition against both big and small Mexican retail businesses pushed from the market:

One thing not well explained in foreign coverage of the Wal-Mart scandal is that Wal-Mart de México S.A.B. de C.V. consists of several smaller chains of supermarkets like Bodega Aurrerá and Superama, clothing shops like Suburbia, and VIPS restaurants. It has been argued that while some of these existing chains were fairly acquired others were subject to more hostile takeovers.

Culture of bribery?

Marco Antonio Gómez Lovera on Vivir Mexico [es] is incensed that Wal-Mart executives in the United States and Mexico preferred to hide their knowledge of the bribery rather than investigate further and punish those responsible. Meanwhile, Mexfiles and other blogs [es] opined that U.S. media and authorities may be downplaying the Mexican reaction due to a supposed “culture of bribery”.

ISN logoThis post and its translations to Spanish, Arabic and French were commissioned by the International Security Network (ISN) as part of a partnership to seek out citizen voices on international relations and security issues worldwide. This post was first published on the ISN blog, see similar stories here.

1 comment

  • Buthodr

    The U.S. bribes (called ‘govenment assistance’) almost every country in the world to gain political advantage to the benefit of U.S. defined global security and economic advantage.  Mexico, as well as cultures in other 3rd world countries, thrive on bribes.  That’s just business as usual and EVERY U.S. business in Mexico participates in that culture.  To only ‘suppose’ of this culture of bribes is to be either naive or ignorant. 

Cancel this reply

Join the conversation -> Buthodr

Authors, please log in »

Guidelines

  • All comments are reviewed by a moderator. Do not submit your comment more than once or it may be identified as spam.
  • Please treat others with respect. Comments containing hate speech, obscenity, and personal attacks will not be approved.