Amazon-Jeff Bezos Says should Do Better for laborers in Last Investor Letter as CEO

 Amazon-Jeff Bezos Says should Do Better for laborers in Last Investor Letter as CEO 




Bezos plans to figure while in transit to make Amazon's workhouses more secure in his new part as leader administrator. Amazon should improve at dealing with its representatives, Jeff Bezos said on Thursday in his last letter to investors as a boss official of the online retail monster. 


Bezos' remarks came only days after Amazon distribution center laborers in Alabama cast a ballot against framing an association by a very 2-to-1 edge — a huge success for the retailer that has savagely opposed unionization for a long time ."While the democratic outcomes were disproportionate and our immediate relationship with representatives is strong, it's obvious to me that we'd like a much better vision for a way we make an incentive for laborers," Bezos, the world's most extravagant man,

 composed inside the letter. 






"I think we'd wish to mean to improve work for our representatives." 


Amazon, the second-biggest private manager inside the US, has been censured by some of its 800,000 representatives for having cruel working conditions. 


Bezos stood up against that analysis in his letter, saying that reports that the organization's laborers were dealt with "like robots" were mistaken. 


Bezos, who is venturing down in the not-so-distant future as CEO of the corporate he established in 1994, said he wanted to figure while in transit to make Amazon's workhouses more secure in his new job as chief director. 


"His (Bezos') affirmation will not change anything, laborers need an association – not simply one more Amazon PR exertion in charge," Stuart Appelbaum, leader of the Retail, Wholesale, and retail outlet Union said during an assertion.

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