With a tightening labor market and a holiday hiring spree underway, Target Corp. said it will raise the minimum wage of all hourly workers to $11 starting in October.
It will bump the rate to $15 an hour by the end of 2020, becoming one of the nation's first major employers to set a date to hit that mark, the Minneapolis-based retailer said Monday.
"It's part of our overall commitment to investing in our team and making sure we're attracting and retaining great talent," Target CEO Brian Cornell told reporters.
Cornell and other executives declined to say how many of its 323,000 hourly employees at stores and distribution centers might get a raise from the current base pay of $10 an hour.
The new policy also will apply to 100,000 seasonal workers it is hiring for the upcoming holiday shopping season.
An improving economy and constricting job market is putting pressure on companies to boost pay for entry-level jobs such as cashiers and shelf stockers, where turnover is high.
"Right now, labor conditions in the retail industry are tight," said Craig Johnson, a retail analyst with Customer Growth Partners. "That's why you see 30 people in line but only two or three checkout lines manned. That drives people nuts. That's because much of retail doesn't pay sufficiently for the services offered."
Target is signaling it wants to compete more aggressively with Costco as "employer of choice," Johnson said, noting Costco's relatively low turnover rate and better pay and benefits.