KEY POINTS
  • Walmart's warehouse workers will get weekly bonuses, as the retail giant competes in a tight labor market and ramps up for the holiday season, the company told CNBC.
  • A growing number of retailers and restaurants have been dangling new perks to recruit and retain employees.
  • Walmart faces tough year-over-year comparisons and may also cater to more e-commerce orders because of the rise of the delta coronavirus variant and changed consumer habits.

In this article

A Walmart package is unloaded from a trailer to be sorted at a FedEx ground hub in Hagerstown, Maryland.

Walmart is giving weekly bonuses to warehouse workers, as the retail giant competes in a tight labor market and ramps up for the holiday season, the company told CNBC.

The discounter is offering additional pay, based on the facility's location and the worker's role and shift. For some full-time workers, that will add up to $200 more per week and could be more if they work overtime, according to Walmart spokesman Scott Pope. That extra pay began this month and will continue through the fiscal year at the majority of distribution and fulfillment centers, he said.

In this article