Amazon offers $3,000 sign-on bonuses to US delivery and warehouse workers

Amazon offers $3,000 sign-on bonuses to US delivery and warehouse workers

Online retailer will also raise its average starting wage to $18 an hour to help recruit 125,000 people

A woman at work in the 855,000-square-foot Amazon fulfilment centre in Staten Island, New York.

Last modified on Tue 14 Sep 2021 12.45 EDT

Amazon is offering sign-on bonuses of up to $3,000 (£2,165) in some locations as it aims to hire 125,000 delivery and warehouse workers across the US amid a recruitment frenzy.

The online retail and tech giant said it was also raising its average starting wage to $18 an hour, up from $17 an hour announced in May, amid fierce competition for hourly paid workers in the US.

Dave Clark, chief executive of Amazon’s global retail business, said: “We take our responsibility as an employer seriously and want our employees to succeed and thrive.”

Amazon’s minimum pay is still $15 an hour in the US but the company is being forced to offer increased incentives to expand operations to cope with the shift to online shopping ahead of the peak Christmas season.

In 2021, Amazon has opened more than 250 new logistics facilities in the US, and will launch a further 100 in September alone.

Last week, the company said it would put $1.2bn into paying for college tuition fees and text books forunsalaried workers starting next year.

Companies are battling to sign up workers as job vacancies hit a record high of 10.9m in July, exceeding the number of unemployed people by more than 2 million, according to the US Department of Labor.

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Retailer Target said it would offer free undergraduate degrees to more than 340,000 staff in the US while delivery company UPS has promised to hand out job offers in 30 minutes as part of efforts to hire 100,000 workers for the festive season.

Amazon’s latest hiring spree – for delivery and warehouse crews – comes on top of plans to hire 55,000 staff in corporate and technology jobs around the world.

The bulk of the positions will be created in the US, where the firm plans to create 40,000 roles. About 2,500 will be created in the UK, with the remainder in India, Germany and Japan.

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