KEY POINTS
  • Help-wanted signs have dotted U.S. stores since the summer as retailers look to hire 704,000 holiday workers this year — the most since 2014.
  • Even before Amazon announced it was raising its minimum pay starting Nov. 1, wages were rising in retail.
  • The annual median base pay for a cashier jumped to $28,237 in October, a 5.4 percent jump over the previous year, according to online job site Glassdoor.com.
A UPS worker sorts packages in New York on Dec. 18, 2017.

U.S. retailers, from Amazon to J.C. Penney, have started earlier and are paying more and upping benefits in a pitched battle to hire more than 700,000 holiday workers in what is the tightest labor market in decades.

The competition to fill all of those openings is fierce. Kohl's started hiring its holiday help in June, and Amazon shook up the entire job market when it announced plans to raise its minimum wage to $15 an hour for its 250,000 U.S. employees. J.C. Penney is holding raffles for pricey vacation packages and gift bundles worth $5,000 apiece.