Amazon.com Inc plans to offer permanent jobs to about 70% of the U.S. workforce it has hired temporarily to meet consumer demand during the coronavirus pandemic, the company told Reuters on Thursday.
The world’s largest online retailer will begin telling 125,000 warehouse employees in June that they can keep their roles longer-term. The remaining 50,000 workers it has brought on will stay on seasonal contracts that last up to 11 months, a company spokeswoman said.
The decision is a sign that Amazon’s sales have increased sufficiently to justify an expanded workforce for order fulfillment, even as government lockdowns ease and rivals open their retail stores for pickup.
Amazon started the hiring spree in March with a blog post appealing to workers laid off by restaurants and other shuttered businesses, promising employment “until things return to normal and their past employer is able to bring them back.”
Seattle-based Amazon did not disclose how much it was spending to make the positions permanent and whether that cost would be in addition to the $4 billion it has forecast for virus-related expenses.
Amazon to offer permanent roles to 70% of 175,000 new U.S. hires, Reuters, May 28
- Brent crude oil reversed from key support level 81.00 - Likely to test resistance…
- Silver broke multi-year resistance level 29.50 - Likely to reach resistance level 32.00 Silver…
The US dollar is not giving up without a fight, gaining for the second day…
Silver climbed above $29.8, rewriting the highs from January 2021, but once again faced selling…
Market picture The crypto market cooled off on Thursday afternoon, but on Friday morning, buyers…
- Amazon reversed from resistance level 190.00 - Likely to fall to support level 180.00…
This website uses cookies