United States Securities and Exchange Commission
Washington, D.C. 20549
NOTICE OF EXEMPT SOLICITATION
Pursuant to Rule 14a-103
United States Securities and Exchange Commission
Washington, D.C. 20549
NOTICE OF EXEMPT SOLICITATION (voluntary submission)
Pursuant to Rule 14a-103
Name of the Registrant: Walgreens Boots Alliance, Inc.
Name of persons relying on exemption: The Shareholder Commons, Inc.
Address of persons relying on exemption: PO Box 1268, Northampton,
MA 01061
Written materials are submitted pursuant to Rule 14a-6(g) (1) promulgated
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Submission is not required of this filer under the terms of the Rule but is made voluntarily
in the interest of public disclosure and consideration of these important issues.
Balancing
diversified shareholder value and company Financial Returns
We urge
shareholders to vote “AGAINST” Stefano
Pessina, Executive Chairman (Item 1h)
The Shareholder Commons urges you to vote “AGAINST”
Executive Chairman Stefano Pessina (Item 1h on the proxy), due to the failure of Walgreens Boots Alliance (“Walgreens” or
the “Company”) to pay a living wage, thereby exposing its diversified shareholders’ portfolios to economic harm that
arises from low wages and income inequality.
The Shareholder Commons is a non-profit advocate for diversified shareholders
that works with investors to stop portfolio companies such as Walgreens from externalizing costs when doing so threatens the value of
diversified portfolios.
Closing the living wage gap worldwide could generate as much as an
additional $4.56 trillion every year through increased productivity and spending,1 which equates to a more than 4 percent increase
in annual GDP. Inadequate pay can thus materially reduce the intrinsic value of the global economy, which in turn harms investment portfolios,
as we explain further in Section B. Walgreens fails to pay a living wage, contrary to its own diversified shareholders’ interests.
A vote against Executive Chairman Stefano Pessina is thus warranted.
| A. | Walgreens’ decisions on employee compensation do not account for economic impact |
| 1. | Walgreens fails to pay all its employees a living wage, which may exacerbate income inequality that creates a drag on diversified
portfolios |
Walgreens’ starting wages for its lowest paid workers fall well
below a living wage. The living wage model reflects “the minimum employment earnings necessary to meet a family’s basic needs
while also maintaining self-sufficiency.”2 The living wage is abstemious, making no allowances for savings, consumption
of even modest prepared foods, or home purchases, among other things. As the MIT Living Wage Calculator explains:
The living wage is the minimum income standard that, if
met, draws a very fine line between the financial independence of the working poor and the need to seek out public assistance or suffer
consistent and severe housing and food insecurity. In light of this fact, the living wage is perhaps better defined as a minimum subsistence
wage for persons living in the United States.3
Meanwhile, the minimum wage is the lowest legal pay rate companies
can offer their employees. Many people believe this is the same as a living wage, but that is not the case. Indeed, in some regions, the
chasm between the two is substantial. The U.S. federal minimum wage stood at $7.25 per hour in 2024, whereas the current average living
wage in the United States is around $23 per hour for a family of four with both adults working.4 While some states have higher
minimums, the highest—Washington, DC’s $17 per hour—still falls well short of a living
wage.
Walgreens says its current lowest hourly wage for its U.S. employees
is $15 an hour, highlighting the fact that this is a significant improvement on the federal minimum wage.5 That wage still
falls well short of a living wage, however. Walgreens does not disclose its lowest wage for its international operations.
_____________________________
1 The Business Commission to Tackle Inequality, “Tackling
Inequality: The Need and Opportunity for Business Action,” June 2022, https://tacklinginequality.org/files/introduction.pdf.
2 https://livingwage.mit.edu/pages/about (Living wage is
a “market-based approach that draws upon geographically specific expenditure data related to a family’s likely minimum food,
childcare, health insurance, housing, transportation, and other basic necessities (e.g. clothing, personal care items, etc.) costs. The
living wage draws on these cost elements and the rough effects of income and payroll taxes to determine the minimum employment earnings
necessary to meet a family’s basic needs while also maintaining self-sufficiency.”)
3 Ibid.
4 Emma Burleigh, “Americans Are Struggling to Scrape
by—More than 40% of Full-Time Workers Aren’t Making a Living Wage,” Fortune, August 26, 2024, https://fortune.com/2024/08/26/many-us-workers-dont-make-living-wage-women-people-of-color/.
5 https://www.sec.gov/ix?doc=/Archives/edgar/data/1618921/000130817923001069/wba4243631-def14a.htm
Walgreens’ U.S. stores are located in widely varied areas with
different costs of living. Noting that, we provide in the following table the 2023 living wage for selected Walgreens locations:6
Store Location |
Living wage: 1 adult, 0 children |
Living wage: 2 working adults, 2 children |
Greenwood, MS |
$17.51/hour |
$19.30/hour |
Hogansville, GA |
$19.24/hour |
$22.50/hour |
Deerfield, IL |
$25.54/hour |
$30.51/hour |
New York, NY |
$28.04/hour |
$34.26/hour |
San Francisco, CA |
$29.87/hour |
$39.62/hour |
In other words, Walgreens’ starting pay fails to meet the basic
needs of even single, childless employees. Walgreens’ base pay is far less than necessary to sustain a family of four with
both adults working full time, even in locations with the lowest cost of living.
A reasonable explanation for Walgreens’ decision not to pay a
living wage, especially considering management’s recent efforts to improve wage structures, is that the Company approach to compensation
does not recognize economy-wide risk mitigation and instead focuses on the risks to its own business.
| B. | Poverty wages and income inequality threaten the returns of Walgreens’ diversified investors |
| 1. | Investors must diversify to optimize their portfolios |
It is commonly understood that investors are best served by diversifying
their portfolios.7 Diversification allows investors to reap the increased returns available from risky securities while greatly
reducing that risk.8 This core principle is reflected in federal law, which requires fiduciaries of federally regulated retirement
plans to “diversify[] the investments of the plan.”9 Similar principles govern other investment fiduciaries.10
| 2. | The performance of a diversified portfolio largely depends on overall market return |
Diversification is thus required by accepted investment theory and
imposed by law on investment fiduciaries. Once a portfolio is diversified, the most important factor determining return will not be how
the companies in that portfolio perform relative to other companies (“alpha”), but rather how the market performs as a whole
(“beta”). In other words, the financial return to such diversified investors chiefly depends on the performance of the market,
not the performance of individual companies. As one work describes this, “virtually all investors have permanent exposure to systematic
market risk, which will still determine 75-95% of their return.”11
_____________________________
6 See MIT’s Living Wage Calculator at https://livingwage.mit.edu/
7 See generally, Burton G. Malkiel, A
Random Walk Down Wall Street (2015).
8 Id.
9 29 USC Section 404(a)(1)(C).
10 See Uniform Prudent Investor Act, § 3 (“[a]
trustee shall diversify the investments of the trust unless the trustee reasonably determines that, because of special circumstances,
the purposes of the trust are better served without diversifying.”)
11 Jon Lukomnik and James P. Hawley, Moving Beyond
Modern Portfolio Theory: Investing That Matters (Routledge, 2021).
As shown in the next section, the social and environmental impacts
of individual companies such as Walgreens can have a significant effect on beta.
| 3. | Costs companies impose on social and environmental systems heavily influence beta |
Over long time periods, beta is influenced chiefly by the performance
of the economy itself, because the value of the investable universe is equal to the portion of the productive economy that the companies
in the market represent.12 Over the long run, diversified portfolios rise and fall with GDP or other indicators of the intrinsic
value of the economy. As the legendary investor Warren Buffet puts it, GDP is the “best single measure” for broad market valuations.13
But the social and environmental costs created by companies pursuing
profits can burden the economy.14 For example, recent research revealed rising income inequality’s drag on GDP. The increase
in income inequality between 1979 and 2018 reduced growth in aggregate demand by about 1.5 percent of GDP. Relative to the 1979 baseline,
rising income inequality lowered aggregate demand growth by more than 4 percent annually in the United States.15
Additional research reveals that income inequality and attendant racial
and gender disparity harm the entire economy. According to the Economic Policy Institute, income inequality is slowing U.S. economic growth
by reducing demand by 2-4 percent.16 The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco determined that gender and racial gaps created
$2.9 trillion in losses to U.S. GDP in 2019.17 Moreover, a recent report from Citigroup found that had four key racial gaps
for Black Americans—wages, education, housing, and investment—been closed in 2000, $16 trillion could have been added to the
U.S. economy. Closing those gaps in 2020 could have added $5 trillion to the U.S. economy over the ensuing five years.18 The
same study explains steps that corporations could take to reduce the gap. This drag on GDP directly reduces the return on a diversified
portfolio over the long term.
_____________________________
12 Principles for Responsible Investment & UNEP Finance
Initiative, Universal Ownership: Why Environmental Externalities Matter to Institutional Investors, Appendix IV, https://www.unepfi.org/fileadmin/documents/universal_ownership_full.pdf.
13 See, e.g., https://archive.fortune.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2001/12/10/314691/index.htm
(total market capitalization to GDP “is probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment”).
14 The Shareholder Commons, “Living Wage & the
Engagement Gap: Using a Systems Lens to Build Portfolio Value through Improved Wages,” November, 2023, https://theshareholdercommons.com/case-studies/labor-and-inequality-case-study/.
15 Josh Bivens and Asha Banerjee, “Inequality’s
Drag on Aggregate Demand - The Macroeconomic and Fiscal Effects of Rising Income Shares of the Rich” (Economic Policy Institute,
2022), https://www.epi.org/publication/inequalitys-drag-on-aggregate-demand/#:~:text=By%20redistributing%20income%20from%20lower,about%201.5%25%20of%20GDP%20annually.
16 Josh Bivens, “Inequality Is Slowing U.S. Economic
Growth: Faster Wage Growth for Low- and Middle-Wage Workers Is the Solution” (Economic Policy Institute, December 12, 2017), https://www.epi.org/publication/secular-stagnation/.
17 Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco et al., “The
Economic Gains from Equity,” Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Working Paper Series, April 7, 2021, 1.000-30.000, https://doi.org/10.24148/wp2021-11.
18 Dana Peterson and Catherine Mann, “Closing the
Racial Inequality Gaps: The Economic Cost of Black Inequality in the U.S.” (Citi, September 2020), https://ir.citi.com/%2FPRxPvgNWu319AU1ajGf%2BsKbjJjBJSaTOSdw2DF4xynPwFB8a2jV1FaA3Idy7vY59bOtN2lxVQM=.
Conversely, closing the living wage gap worldwide could generate an
additional $4.56 trillion every year through increased productivity and spending,19 which equates to a more than 4 percent
increase in annual GDP.
The reduction in economic productivity caused by income inequality
and racial disparity directly reduces returns on diversified portfolios,20 and creates serious social costs that further threaten
financial markets. For example, excessive inequality can erode social cohesion and heighten political polarization, leading to social
instability.21
Excessive inequality is also a social determinant of health that is
linked to more chronic health conditions developed earlier in life, thereby increasing health costs and decreasing the value of human
capital.22 A recent study found that “a sustained history of low-wage earning in midlife was associated with significantly
earlier and excess mortality, especially for workers whose low-wage earning was experienced in the context of employment instability.”23
Early and excess mortality, in turn, has its own economic costs. Researchers calculated a potential economic output loss of up to 2.6
percent of GDP by 2030 in low-income countries and 0.9 percent in upper-middle-income countries from early and excess
mortality.24
A U.S. Government Accountability Office report25 revealed
how taxpayers foot the bill when corporations underpay their workers. Millions of full-time workers rely on federal health care and food
assistance programs just to get by, and the wholesale and retail trade is in the top five industries with the highest concentration of
working adults enrolled in Medicaid and SNAP.26 This, of course, is a form of corporate welfare, in that taxpayers—and,
by extension, shareholders—are subsidizing employers who pay low wages.
_____________________________
19 The Business Commission to Tackle Inequality, “Tackling
Inequality: The Need and Opportunity for Business Action,” June 2022, https://tacklinginequality.org/files/introduction.pdf.
20 Ibid n.15.
21 International Monetary Fund, IMF Fiscal Monitor: Tackling
Inequality (October 2017), available at https://www.imf.org/en/publications/fm/issues/2017/10/05/fiscal-monitor-october-2017.
22 Anne Matusewicz and Henry Mason, “Facing Hard Truths:
The Material Risk of Rising Inequality,” Pensions & Investments, September 16, 2020, https://www.pionline.com/sponsored-content/facing-hard-truths-material-risk-rising-inequality.
23 Katrina L. Kezios et al., “History of Low Hourly
Wage and All-Cause Mortality Among Middle-Aged Workers,” JAMA 329, no. 7 (February 21, 2023): 561, https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2023.0367.
24 Blake C. Alkire et al., “The Economic Consequences
Of Mortality Amenable To High-Quality Health Care In Low- And Middle-Income Countries,” Health Affairs 37, no. 6 (June 2018): 988–96,
https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2017.1233.
25 United States Government Accountability Office, Federal
Social Safety Net Programs: Millions of Full-Time Workers Rely on Federal Health Care and Food Assistance Programs (October 2020), available
at https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-21-45.pdf.
26 Ibid.
For a full survey of the empirical evidence for the economic damage
arising from poverty wages and income inequality, see The Shareholder Commons, “Living Wage & the Engagement Gap: Using a Systems
Lens to Build Portfolio Value through Improved Wages,” November, 2023, https://theshareholdercommons.com/case-studies/labor-and-inequality-case-study/.
The acts of individual companies affect whether the economy will bear
these costs: if they increase their own bottom line by contributing to inequality, the profits earned for their shareholders may be inconsequential
in comparison to the added costs the economy bears.
Economists have long recognized that profit-seeking firms will not
account for costs they impose on others, and there are many profitable strategies that harm stakeholders, society, and the environment.27
Indeed, in 2018, publicly listed companies around the world imposed social and environmental costs on the economy with a value of $2.2
trillion annually—more than 2.5 percent of global GDP.28 This cost was more than 50 percent of the profits those companies
reported.
As shown below in Figure 1, Walgreens’ choices that contribute
to a financially insecure labor force threaten its diversified shareholders’ financial returns, even if those decisions might benefit
Walgreens financially.
Figure 1
_____________________________
27 See, e.g., Kaushik Basu, Beyond the Invisible Hand:
Groundwork for a New Economics 10 (2011) (explaining the First Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics as the strict conditions (including
the absence of externalities) under which competition for profit produces optimal social outcomes).
28 Andrew Howard, SustainEx: Examining the social value
of corporate activities, (Schroders 2019), available at https://www.schroders.com/en/sysglobalassets/digital/insights/2019/pdfs/sustainability/sustainex/sustainex-short.pdf.
| 4. | Walgreens could mitigate the costs it externalizes by paying a living wage |
A living wage, while no panacea, would at least provide the minimum
income necessary for Walgreens’ workers to meet their most basic needs.
As an essay in The New York Times observed:
“[W]hile it is a common refrain that a living wage
would force employers to hire fewer workers and thus destroy jobs, there are persuasive empirical and philosophical responses to this
objection. The stagnation of real wages for American workers does not reflect their low productivity so much as the increasing
concentration of wealth within companies. In 1965, the average top chief executive made 21 times as much as a typical worker in
America. In 2020, the ratio was 351 to 1.”29
At Walgreens, that pay gap is worse. As noted in the Company proxy
statement, our CEO makes 410 times our median compensated employee.
Moreover, Mr. Wentworth and Walgreens’ other decision-makers—who
are heavily compensated in equity—do not share the same broad market risks as Walgreens’ diversified shareholders.
Companies that fail to pay a living wage impose negative externalities on the broader economy, and diversified shareholders bear the cost.
Walgreens’ disclosures demonstrate that it simply fails to address
the financial insecurity and income inequality inherent in its failure to provide its workforce a living wage. Given the Company’s
operational focus on enterprise value and limited allocation of resources toward workforce compensation, shareholders must ask Walgreens
to pay a living wage so as to stop externalizing costs onto the broader economy. Investors must make this request because a healthy economy
is a far greater value driver of their portfolio value than is the enterprise value of any one company within those portfolios: systematic
factors explain 75-94 percent of average portfolio return.30
| C. | Walgreens either fails to understand or refuses to acknowledge the point |
Walgreens may be making decisions regarding its compensation and workforce
practices without regard to the impact its remuneration approach has on economic productivity and, by extension, its diversified shareholders’
portfolios. Walgreens opposed a 2024 shareholder proposal asking it to pay a living wage, making spurious or irrelevant arguments in its
opposition statement.31
| 1. | Walgreens asserts that it pays “competitive” wages, ignoring the subject of a living wage |
This attempted abdication reveals Walgreens’ failure to understand
and/or acknowledge its role in a systematic risk scenario. We do not dispute that Walgreens has implemented measures to improve employee
pay, but this framing completely misses the point. “Competitive” pay means little to employees who still must rely on Medicaid
and SNAP benefits just to put food on the table and house and clothe their children. “Competitive” pay confers limited value
if the entire industry underpays, as this one does.
_____________________________
29 Nick Romeo, The M.I.T. Professor Defining What It
Means to Live, The New York Times (December 28, 2021), available at https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/28/opinion/living-wage-calculator.html.
30 Lukomnik and Hawley, Moving Beyond Modern Portfolio
Theory.
31 https://www.sec.gov/ix?doc=/Archives/edgar/data/1618921/000130817923001069/wba4243631-def14a.htm
| 2. | Walgreens highlights various employee benefits it provides, none of which allows its employees to cover their subsistence costs |
Walgreens describes a serious of benefits and training programs it
provides its employees. Such benefits are an important and necessary element of total compensation, but they do not fulfill the essential
function of a living wage: to allow employees to cover their most basic costs of living.
| 3. | Walgreens fails to recognize the reference point of greatest importance to diversified investors |
It matters little how well or poorly a company performs relative to
its industry if the industry as a whole is externalizing costs that damage critical systems that support a thriving economy. Essentially,
Walgreens’ contention is that it is failing no worse than its peers. For diversified shareholders who absorb the costs of this failure,
it would be better if the Company led a race to the top, creating the momentum necessary to ensure full-time workers across the economy
earned a living.
Please vote “AGAINST” Stefano Pessina, Executive
Chairman (Item 1h).
By voting “AGAINST” Mr. Pessina, shareholders can
urge Walgreens to pay a living wage and thus account directly for its effect on the labor force, upon which a thriving economy depends.
Doing so would allow management to support its diversified shareholders’ interests in optimizing their entire portfolios.
The Shareholder Commons urges you to vote “AGAINST”
Stefano Pessina, Executive Chairman (Item 1h) on the proxy, over Walgreens’ failure to protect its diversified shareholders’
portfolios by paying a living wage, at the Walgreens Boots Alliance, Inc. Annual Meeting on January 30, 2025.
For questions regarding this exempt solicitation, please contact
Sara E. Murphy of The Shareholder Commons at +1.202.578.0261 or via email at sara@theshareholdercommons.com.
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