Sunday, May 31, 2020

Uxorial Use-Value and Marxist Marriages Evaluation of Women and Desire in The Beggars Opera - Literature Essay Samples

Though set in the underworld of thievery, John Gays The Beggars Opera codifies a set of Marxist sexual politics in which marriage stands as the great equalizer of desire and power. An often aphoristic overview of the traditional power struggle between men and women frames a world in which marriage reduces the wooers desire but raises his power by an equal degree through ownership as a husband. This commodity fetishism of the wife spurs, in turn, the external desire of potential suitors, restoring equilibrium to the scales of eros. I will argue that Macheaths eventual capture (disregarding his brief escape and ironically crowd-pleasing twist-ending) stems from the complications his insatiable desire, at the expense of an all-consuming greed, introduces to a capitalistic society based on indirectly equitable gender relations.Though the opera contains stereotypical evaluations of sought-after virgins, Gay moves beyond this pat system by exploring the source of their appeal in monetar y terms. Air V, sung by Mrs. Peachum, equates the virgin with raw, yet to be coined material: A maid is like the golden ore, / Which hath guineas intrinsical int, / Whose worth is never known before / It is tried and impressed in the Mint (I.v). Note the seeming contradiction in that tried means refined or purified; the virgin must undergo some sort of transmutation as she is debauched. The currency conceit, which threads throughout the opera, here is an example of what Marx calls the use-value of an object, which is, essentially, [T]he utility of a thing (Marx 421). The virgin is valuable, and her use-value high, because she possesses a heretofore unknown sexual utility. We can see how this leads to a trumped-up desire on her suitors parts: Virgins are like the fair flower in its lustre, / Which in the garden enamels the ground (I.vii). Again, Gay polishes the airs traditional virgin-flower metaphor with the monetary imagery of lustre and enamel.The heightened emphasis on th e virgins eroticization creates a tension between her purity and the inevitability of sex: If soon she be not made a wife, / Her honours singed, and then for life, / Shes ‹ what I dare not name (I.iv). In an opera that tosses around the words hussy, slut, jade, and every other permutation of prostitute, Mrs. Peachums abstention from the label for her daughter is a revealing gesture at this point (she has no problems tagging Polly with sad slut two songs afterwards). Furthermore, the passivity of the virgin‹be not made a wife (as with It is tried and impressed)‹exposes the threat of coitus against which she must guard herself. Along the lines of this anxiety, Mrs. Peachum stresses the financial particularity with which the virgin must choose her first mate: But the first time a woman is frail, she should be somewhat nice methinks, for then or never is the time to make her fortune (I.viii). Despite her apparent choice in the matter, the virgin remains a passive figure, defending her compromised virtue as a dark secret: After that, she hath nothing to do but to guard herself from being found out, and she may do as she pleases (I.viii). The implication is that there is no interregnum between a womans status as a virgin and doing as she pleases‹the first act of intercourse is a slippery, slatternly slope.How, then, does the virgin milk her beauty and actively raise her value as a desirable object? Polly is a shrewd flirt, currying Macheaths favor in exchange for material goods. A woman knows how to be mercenary, she tells her father. If I allow Captain Macheath some trifling liberties, I have this watch and other visible marks of his favour to show for it (I.vii). The contradictory language of ownership‹using liberties when her services are anything but free‹suggests that this is not simply use-value, but something else. Macheath bestows his gifts, as I wrote before, in exchange for sexual compensation from Polly. As Pollys metaph oric technique of coitus reservatus arouses and sustains Macheaths desire, her own value appreciates via his financial expenditure on her. Marx separates the notion of exchange-value from use-value and defines it as a quantity of pure labor:Along with the useful qualities of the products themselves, we put out of sight both the useful character of the various kinds of labour embodied in them, and the concrete forms of that labour, there is nothing left but what is common to them all; all are reduced to one and the same sort of labour, human labour in the abstract. (423)What is now noteworthy and valuable about Polly is not the utility of the watch, which could just as well be broken, but the visible marks of his favor to show for it. In other words, that the net worth of Macheaths labor, the act of wooing and the work that accompanies it, is a tangible and quantifiable term. We can also assume that the labor of a lothario as Macheath is worth more, per hour, than a layman suitor s. Considering that an early definition of mark is the stamp or impress of a coin, then Macheaths visible marks (Marx?) become more than material gifts, but external signs of corporeal possession by monetary means (OED, 1.11a). Although Polly has, unbeknownst to her parents, already married Macheath and conceded his ownership, which I will later address, these are ostensibly (and once truthfully were) the rituals of courtship and must be critiqued as such.During the courtship process, the woman continues to absorb her suitors capital and increase her exchange-value. When Mrs. Peachum laments that she is sorry upon Pollys account the Captain hath not more discretion, Gay calls our attention to the fiscal pun as Peachum utters Upon Pollys account! twice (I.iv). The play on Polly as a depository of savings is clarified when Filch acknowledges that love comes with a price tag: For suits of love, like law, are won by pay, / And beauty must be feed into our arms (I.ii). When the suit ors desire peaks, and when the womans exchange-value reaches its breaking point (for no reasonable man would continue to ply his lady with gifts if it came to no fruition), she accepts marriage, becoming her husbands property and forfeiting her gains, as Peachum moans: If the wench does not know her own profit, sure she knows her own pleasure than to make herself a property! (I.iv) The legal union and possession, as marriage therapists are all too familiar with, usually quells the husbands desire as a typical push-pull antithesis, as Polly and Lucy express in a duet (one that applies to all relationships, but especially marriage): LUCY: If we grow fond they shun us. POLLY: And when we fly them, they pursue. LUCY: But leave us when theyve won us (III.viii). The possible pun of pursue on purse reminds us of the investment suitors are willing to make, and of which husbands may ignore. The eroticism of the chase of the virgin is gone, and the wifes exchange-value is restored to a us e-value, albeit one of a different composition, as Peachum observes: A good sportsman always lets the hen partridges fly, because the breed of the game depends upon them (I.ii). The wifes sexuality (even, one may infer, her genitalia), formerly the prime indicator of her mysterious use-value as a virgin, turns from stoking the mans desire, now absent, to the purely utilitarian (and narcissistic for the man, in that it preserves his name and blood) task of reproduction.Under her husbands control, the wife emerges as his commodity. Recall that the virgin was tried and impressed as a coin; Polly and Macheath both later refer to the tactile act of pressing in courtship. Polly announces that she was compelled to marriage When he kissed me so closely he pressed, and Macheath simply includes this in a list of directions for seducing a virgin: Press her (I.viii, II.iii). The visible marks of the husband become so prominent as to overshadow the rest of the wifes identity. Marx uses simi lar imagery in his classification of commodity fetishism: A commodity is therefore a mysterious thing, simply because in it the social character of mens labour appears to them as an objective character stamped upon the product of that labour (436). The value of the labor, or what one might call the humanity, of an object is minimized in the face of the evaluation of the final product. Before marriage, a womans commodity fetishism was derived from her clothing, perhaps bought with the aid of a suitor, but independent from him: If any wench Venuss girdle wear, / Though she be never so ugly; / Lilies and roses will quickly appear, / And her face look wondrous smugly (I.iv). After the fetishism of marriage, however, other men perceive a wife only as a transferable (hence, the coin analogy) object of the husbands possession in what Marx describes as a definite social relation between men, that assumes, in their eyes, the fantastic form of a relation between things (436). Who her hus band is and the labor/wooing he has invested, at this point, is fairly immaterial to other men, according to Marx: There, the existence of the things qua commodities, and the value relation between the products of labour which stamps them as commodities, have absolutely no connection with their physical properties and with the material relations arising therefrom (436). In a particularly telling quote, Mrs. Peachum backs up this notion: All men are thieves in love, and like a woman the better for being anothers property (I.v). The thrill of luring away a married woman is enough for the suitor, and his skyrocketing desire balances out the husbands discounted passion, who simultaneously compensates for his lost lust of the flesh with his tightened leash of financial power. In this roundabout triangle, everyone profits and loses in terms of power, if we take the presence of desire as a benefit to ones life: 1) The wife no longer has financial or sensual power within the confines of her marriage over her 2) husband, who has forsaken his desire for the power that comes with economic ownership, but this libidinous power is externally restored to the woman (since the husband is now jealous) by the increased appetite of the 3) suitor, who has lost his claim to any legal possession of the wife, who is now desired again by the 4) husband out of jealousy, until he again loses interest, and the cycle continues ad infinitum. For society to proceed orderly and harmoniously, the equation must cancel itself out, so that each player is as powerful after, as he or she was before, the marriage.How does Macheath upset this harmony, and how does this inevitably lead to his capture? His resistance to the traditional behavioral cycle as defined above is what denies him access to the staid safety a conventional marriage offers, one in which libidinous lack is compensated for by pecuniary profit. His carnal appetite does not leave room for a pragmatic main course; he gorges hims elf on dessert. In front of Polly, he sings My heart was free, / It roved like the bee, / ÂÅ'Till Polly my passion requited and satisfied his need for more flowers (I.xiii). In parting, he even draws a direct parallel between his love for Polly and a misers love for money: The miser thus a shilling sees, / Which hes obliged to pay, / With sighs resigns it by degrees, / And fears ÂÅ'tis gone for aye (I.xiii). His sincerity is quickly demolished when he later reverses this monetary analogy: And a man who loves money, might as well be contented with one guinea, as I with one woman (II.iii). He is not merely an 18th-century version of the reluctant-to-commit male as stereotyped by the modern sitcom and Hollywood vehicle but, rather, a man burdened (or blessed, depending on ones viewpoint) with an infinite scale of desire. While other men in Gays London follow the adage You can never be too rich or too thin (perhaps inverting the thin component for the times), Macheath would add o r have too many women. Since no woman can dampen his lust, none holds a distinctive place in his heart. When the Captain pleads to Polly Suspect my honour, my courage, suspect anything but my love (65), Gay alludes to Hamlets love letter to Ophelia . But Macheaths indecision is less like Hamlets paralytic oscillations than it is akin to Macbeths ever-ambitious grasp for more power by whatever means; it is the indecision of the narrator in John Donnes poem The Indifferent, who can love her, and her, and you, and you. Macheaths boundless reservoir of desire prefers the free-hearted ladies of the town to the maidens (II.iii). The prostitutes promiscuity is an obvious boon, but their deep-seated connection to money give them an additional appeal for Macheath. The prostitute is a self-reliant wage-earner (if we ignore her debt to her madam), allaying Macheaths conventional masculine fears of a dependent woman, financially or otherwise. The emotionally independent and indifferent pr ostitute also bears the seemingly paradoxical relation to a court lady, who can have a dozen young fellows at her ear without complying with one, as Peachum wishes his daughter comported herself. More important to the highwayman, the prostitutes in The Beggars Opera are all thieves‹kindred spirits with Macheath, to be sure‹who, combined with the selling of their bodies, develop as sexualized commodity fetishes of theft and commerce, in that they are represented by the handkerchiefs they steal and the sex they ply.This is irresistible to Macheath, and Freud might read his capital/material goods-fetish for the prostitutes as a token of triumph over the threat of castration and a protection against it by replacing their absent phalli with shillings or another physical manifestation of money (Freud 154). In Macheaths case, castration is giving way to a sentimentality (which sometimes seems to pop up for him) that leads to a regular marriage, one which would effectively kill hi s superhuman libido, much as the greed-fetishist Inkle fears his marriage to the Indian Maid Yarico will expose his repressed sentimentality in a popular 18th-century tale. But is Macheath truly so fixated on sex as to ignore money, as when he claims Money is not so strong a cordial [as women are] for the time? (II.iii) In fact, he loves gambling just as much, if not more, than sex. Compared to pursuing virgins and dallying with prostitutes, gambling captures the best of both worlds; it delivers the thrill of an unknown outcome or value of the former activity, while it is free of the emotional responsibility (except for payment of debt) the latter also disregards. Gay drops a hint to the sex/gambling connection when he has Peachum declare that daughters take as much pleasure in cheating a father and mother, as in cheating at cards (I.viii). Macheath would certainly agree, except that he probably takes more pleasure in cards, because he knows he can seduce any woman‹winning at cards still requires some luck. His luck runs out, however, when the prostitutes betray him, citing his dishonorableness: Cards and dice are only fit for cowardly cheats, who prey upon their friends (II.iv). This statement insinuates that alongside Macheaths distrustful life is a buried distrust of women epitomized by his resistance to marriage. Jenny Diver then takes up [Macheaths] pistol while Suky Tawdry takes up the other; to continue the Freudian motif, the women in the opera symbolically castrate Macheath, appropriating phallic power when his threatens to lure them all into his trap. If this logic seems specious, consider that in the previous act, after Macheath delivers his Hamlet allusion to Polly, he exclaims May my pistols misfire, and my mare slip her shoulder while I am pursued, if I ever forsake thee! (I.xiii) The male/female juxtaposition of pistols and the mare blends similarly in the ambush (the women seize the pistols, and they slip out from under Macheaths p redatory position), and for further linguistic evidence, note Suky Tawdrys spiteful explanation to Macheath directly after they take his pistols: Beside your loss of money, ÂÅ'tis a loss to the ladies. Gaming takes you off from women (II.iv, italics mine).Excluding brief moments of freedom, Macheath spends the rest of the opera fettered and in a cell. At one point, Polly even latches herself on to him, crying O! Twist thy fetters about me, that he may not haul me from thee! (II.xiv) Macheaths desire is finally and symbolically tamped down, and this is when she feels closest to him: No power on earth can eer divide, / The knot that sacred love hath tied (II.xiv). Macheaths poetical justice (III.xvi) of being hanged may as well be a lifetime spent in fetters, for his symbolic castration is not so much Gays comment on Macheaths immorality, of which everyone in the opera is culpable, but on his uncompromising sexual greediness in a society that functions only when the libido and th e purse hold each other in check. Whether this is an attack on Macheaths philosophy or on society at large is unclear, although the Beggars final statement, if not taken as parody, favors the latter: Twould have shown that the lower sort of people have their vices in a degree as well as the rich: and that they are punished for them (III.xvi).Works Cited:Freud, Sigmund. The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud. Trans. James Strachey (London: The Hogarth Press).Gay, John. The Beggars Opera. New York: Penguin Books, 1986.Marx, Karl. Selected Writings. Ed. David McLellan. Oxford UP.

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Relationship Between Managers And Managers - 1733 Words

Relationships amongst employees and their managers dictate the level of happiness each derives from the workplace. Communication plays a key role in the success of these relationships. Relations between managers and their subordinates are known as downward relationships. Relations between subordinates and managers are known as upward relationships. Relations between peers are known as lateral relationships. All of these relationships and the communication flowing between them are capable of contributing to the success of an organization as well the allocation of power and politics. Upward relations. Organizational citizenship adds value to the success of upward relations. Organizational citizenship is at its essence, the belief that†¦show more content†¦This behavior is recognized as benefiting of organizational citizenship, which this manager rewarded (DuBrin, 2009, p. 88). †¢This manager focused on rewarding group success. This increases organizational citizenship behaviors, an impression management tactic positively impacting interdependent relations (DuBrin, 20009, p.90). A manager within my organization ineffectively utilized upward communications be acting in the following ways. †¢He promoted competition amongst team members increasing self-serving behaviors. Members of his team found no benefit in helping their team members succeed and so altruistic actions rarely occurred (DuBrin, 2009, p. 89). †¢This manager rewarded employees solely based on individual performance (DuBrin, 2009, p.91). The result was that the strong employees stayed strong and weak never had a chance. Strong employees basked â€Å"in reflected glory† as an impression management tactic (DuBrin, 2009, p. 96). Downward relations. The leader-member exchange (LMX) theory is a theory based on the belief that there is a positive correlation between the quality of the relationships between a leader and their direct reports and the success of the organization (DuBrin, 2009, p.143). A manager within my organization effectively communicated using downward relations in the following ways. †¢She utilized authority to further the purpose of the organization as a whole (DuBrin, 2009,

Tuesday, May 5, 2020

English Coursework Never Giving Up Essay Example For Students

English Coursework Never Giving Up Essay Have you ever wished for something so much that you could imagine yourself achieving that dream and being successful? but you gave in despair Have you ever had that one aim that you believed that you could achieve it, but then you suffered with great pain that you had to deal with, when you realised that your dream had become nothing more than a failure? Have you ever woken up early in the morning and made lists of plans that you thought that would be achieving but ended up not completing? Today I will get out of this boring everyday bed lifestyle and for beginners go hit the gym, start eating the right diet, do all my courseworks and do everything that I have to do, because I cant take it anymore. I want to be someone successful in life and then after a hard day in school realising that you didnt achieve even one goal and you wasted the whole day making more plans that makes you more of a failure? I can guess that for many people the answer to these questions is yes, because everyone has passed through these disappointing moments, but the question that never goes away is, why do most of our dreams and plans become failures? I would assume that the biggest reason why this happens is because people like finding stupid excuses and they use the rule of I will do it tomorrow more than they should. Excuses are just reasons that weak people find to fail without trying. People need to understand that if you wish for something you need to fight for it. You need to see your objective as gold and your barriers as your enemies, like in a movie, you just have to be ready to confront all your enemies fearlessly, be prepared to pass through all the disappointments and pains that life put you into and the most important is to be strong and faithful and never give up. I came to England in 2013, I started school in year 9, and because I didnt know how to speak English at all, I thought that I would never be capable of being in the same level as somebody in the same year as me. I was so frustrated, I used to go home and cry because I used to think that I would never be similar to the students from my school. I didnt want to try and communicate with anybody because I was too scared of making mistakes, and I thought that my dream of living in England and speaking another language would just be another goal that I wouldnt be able to achieve. Everyone used to say You have to try otherwise you will never learn it or It takes time, one day you will get used to it, but I didnt want to listen, and I thought that another failure was coming in to my life. But one day I had to wake up and start fighting for my dreams to become true. It was hard, but I then realised that I could do it and nothing is impossible for those who believe in themselves. What does success actually mean? Well most people would say Success is the accomplishment of an aim or purpose or Success means victory. But is that the right answer for the meaning of success? Well, I think that there is not a wrong or a right answer for this question. In my opinion success is what you believe it is. One saying I found suggested that Excuses are the tools of incompetence, used to build monuments of nothingness. I understand that its hard to achieve your goals, but if you dont try, you will always be another dreamer. And is that what you want? If you want to be successful in life, if you want to be proud of yourself, then you have to start working hard now; it is never too late to follow your dreams and be who you always wished to be.

Saturday, April 18, 2020

Physics lab report free essay sample

AIM: Finding the gravitational field strength by using a simple harmonic motion of a spring and slotted masses. INTRODUCTION: When a mass suspended from a spring is displaced, due to the acceleration, kg s-2, from its equilibrium and released it will oscillate up and down with a kind of motion called simple harmonic motion, shm. The period (T), time taken to measure for one complete oscillation, of this motion is: m/kg = mass of the oscillating system k/Nm−1 = force constant of the spring. Hooke’s Law tells that the force acting on the spring is proportional to the extension of the spring; mg=ke Mass is the amount of matter contained in an object and its SI unit is kg. Gravitational field strength, g, is caused masses and the g at the surface of a planet must be the same as the acceleration due to gravity on surface. Therefore; PROCEDURE: First of all locate the clamp on the stand make sure that the clamp is tightened. We will write a custom essay sample on Physics lab report or any similar topic specifically for you Do Not WasteYour Time HIRE WRITER Only 13.90 / page Then hang the spring on the clamp. Attach a mass hanger directly to the bottom of the hanging spring and then add a 100 g mass. Start with a 100g mass and measure the extension of spring by ruler then release the spring slowly in order to not to damage the spring. The spring will oscillate due to the acceleration, by using a stopwatch record the time taken for twenty complete oscillations. Then repeat this whole process with time same size of mass, you have to do two trials to narrow the uncertainty. Then add 100 g masses one by one to the mass hanger and record the extension of the spring and the time taken for that size of mass to complete twenty oscillations. You will be given an unknown mass and also record the time taken of that mass to oscillate twenty times. After you gather the data needed, you will sketch a T2 versus extension graph. VARIABLES: Dependent Independent Controlled Period Extension Making sure that spring oscillates vertically only because simple harmonic motion takes place when the acceleration of object is always directed towards its displacement from a fixed point. DIAGRAM: CONCLUSION: Simple harmonic motion is defined as the motion takes place when the acceleration, a, of object is always directed, towards, and proportional to, its point. Overall, the purpose of this experiment was to find the acceleration due to the gravity using a coil spring. The acceleration is equal to g since there is not any external force besides gravity acting on the spring. Differences existed in the experimental graph of the g from the actual g. These differences can be accounted as a random error also I could not press the timer at the exact time but it would not affect the accuracy of the experiment. The percentage error is 11%. The real value of g is measured as 9.8234 ms-2, as it is given on lab report instruction sheet. The experimental value of the g is calculated as 10.96 ms-2  ± 0.35 ms-2uncertainty. EVALUATION: The uncertainty of the extension is  ±0.1 cm this might had an impact on the extension measured however this would not create a significant impact on the value. The  ±1% accuracy of the masses might also had an impact on the calculation since the length of extension is proportional to masses and extension is caused by masses it might cause a calculation error. In the experiment a stopwatch is used to calculate the period of 20 complete oscillations however the reflex of a person pressing the stop button can differ so this creates a random error. The uncertainty is  ± 0,35 ms-2, this means that there are no systematic errors. IMPROVING THE INVESTIGATION: Since the precision and accuracy are related with random and systematic errors, minimizing these errors would make the experiment more accurate and precise. To reduce the random errors or to minimize them, the number of trials can be increased so the observer’s possibility of making a mistake would be minimized. To reduce the systematic errors adequate instruments should be used so misreading would not occur.

Saturday, March 14, 2020

Hazard Mitigation essays

Hazard Mitigation essays This project discusses the topics of hazard mitigation, what it is and its importance, the difference between structural and non-structural mitigation strategies, and the hazard planning process. As the cost of disasters rise, it is more apparent that pre-disaster actions must be implemented to reduce the amount of devastation to a local or state community. These pre-disaster actions fall into the meaning of mitigation. Mitigation is defined as "sustained actions taken to reduce or eliminate long-term risk to people and property from hazards and their effects" (IS 393, pg 1-2). There are four phases of Emergency Management: Preparedness, Response, Recovery, and Mitigation. The overall end goal of mitigation is to reduce risk. The success of the mitigation efforts will decrease the requirements, the impact, and the expense of a hazardous event. The Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000 requires communities and states to develop a hazard mitigation plan. This plan must be approved and in place before any post-disaster funds are administered (FEMA 364, p.11). To reduce risk you must find out what hazards are in the community. This starts the process of mitigation. There are three phases of hazard mitigation: Hazard Identification - Identify "all of the hazards that potentially threaten a community" (IS 393, p. 1-5). Hazard Analysis - Analyze each hazard individually to determine the degree of threat that is posed by each. Strategy Preparation - Identify mitigation priorities and mitigation measures to address these priorities. Determine resources needed to implement these measures and identify potential sources for technical and financial assistance. "Hazard mitigation is the only phase of emergency management specifically dedicated to breaking the cycle of damage, reconstruction, and repeated damage" (FEMA 364, p.11). Examples of mitigation are land use planning, adoption of building codes, and elev...

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Ethics Reflection Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 750 words

Ethics Reflection - Essay Example At the workplace, the ethics are supposed to act as a guide as to how members of an organization can relate to one another and the people they are serving (Barney, 2007). This paper will review the roles ethics and social responsibility play in the workplace. As companies continue to grow, so does the need for skilled labour. The problem, however, becomes the need to change as the economic scene is also changing. This means that the standard of living is affected. People, therefore, require more money to satisfy their daily needs. In organizations that they aspire to work in, they dream of making it big and achieving their dreams (Shaw, 2010). However, the pressure brought on by life makes it harder for them with each passing day. This is where ethics at the workplace come into play. In the event, people go to work for all the wrong reasons; they are bound to be side tracked from their objectives. The goal would have been to make an honest living through hard work. As seen in many scenarios, greed gets the better of many people and they end up doing something wrong (Shaw, 2010). At times, they end up going against the workplace conduct. Many believe that doing the right thing is a moral obligation. This is more than true. When people trust an organization with their money only to learn that they are being robbed, it is never a good feeling. The people who have experienced this often lose faith in many honest organizations that are left. When thinking of stakeholders’ needs, it is very important that the planning be based on what the stakeholder wants. A strategic plan could help the smallest organization grow into something significantly huge (Weiss, 2008). Understanding what they want can be very tricky. However, with the right mind set, the perfect plan can be set in motion. The stakeholders need to be known first. This can be the first step in creating the strategic plan. When the audience has been identified, they can be approached with something that

Monday, February 10, 2020

Walmart Research Paper Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 1000 words

Walmart - Research Paper Example Mission and the Vision Statement The mission statement of Wal-Mart is ‘we save people money so that they get live better lives’ (Wal-Mart 2011 Annual Report, 2012) There is no specific vision statement for Wal-Mart, however the following quote by Wal-Mart serves as an example of the company’s vision: ‘The secret of successful retailing is to give your customers what they want. And really, if you think about it from your point of view as a customer, you want everything: a wide assortment of good-quality merchandise; the lowest possible prices; guaranteed satisfaction with what you buy; friendly, knowledgeable service; convenient hours; free parking; a pleasant shopping experience’ (Walton, 1990) Competitive Advantage of Wal-Mart Wal-Mart has always portrayed itself as the low price provider. It offers its consumers brand products at discounted rates. It is able to enjoy this advantage because it buys its products in bulk quantities and keeps its profit margin quite low. The aim is to increase sales so that profits will be achieved through increased sales. The company has also expanded extensively within and outside the United States. The objective for the company has been to open up big Wal-Mart stores in almost every corner of the country. This would allow people to have better access to these stores. Also these stores offer almost everything; from food items to electronic goods. The expansion strategy for international countries is also quite developed for Wal-Mart. When Wal-Mart enters into a foreign market, it does so by buying out the existing competitor. In this way, Wal-Mart gets several advantages. It is able to kill one competitor and establish a store in a prime location. Also the company benefits from the assets and human resource of the previous store. Government Regulation Industry for Wal-Mart The company is regulation through local laws in which the company operates. Since the company operates in different countries, it has to comply with the respective laws of the country. The company is facing issues with regard to its labor relations. The company does not allow its workers to develop unions. Also these workers are filing lawsuits against the company on the basis of working conditions, benefits offered and discrimination. Regulations affect the company by requiring the company to comply with existing laws and to ensure that the workers are treated fairly (Gereffi and Christian, 2009). SWOTT Analysis Strengths The biggest strength for Wal-Mart is the competitive prices that they offer. The company has presence in over 15 countries in the world and has opened up multiple stores in these countries. This large scale of operation allows the company to gain economies of scal e along with developing a strong position against the competitors. The retail industry is all about offering the best prices and the widest range and Wal-Mart is able to do this. This is perhaps the biggest strength for the company. The company also has developed a good IT base. It was the first retail store to adopt the bar code system. Since Wal-Mart is proactive in adopting new technology, it enjoys