Working at Wal-Mart just became one of the most coveted jobs in retail
But relative to the rest of the retail industry, this claim is unfair.
Wal-Mart just announced that it would raise hourly pay for 500,000 of its associates.
By April, all hourly Wal-Mart employees will make at least $9 an hour.
By next February, all hourly Wal-Mart employees will make at least $10 an hour.
Wal-Mart is often targeted by labor activists for its low wages, but data suggests that Starbucks pays its workers even less.
Wal-Mart's current sales associates earn an average of $8.86 an hour, which is six cents more than Starbucks baristas' hourly pay, according to a report by the National Bureau of Economic Research.
The pay gap is greater when it comes to the retailers' management positions. Wal-Mart's assistant managers make an average of $43,916 annually, for example, while Starbucks' assistant managers make roughly $33,634 a year.
The authors of the 47-page report point out, however, that Starbucks' stores are much smaller than Wal-Mart's. The data also excludes benefits, such as Starbucks' College Achievement Plan, which helps workers pay for a college degree. The Motley Fool first reported on the data.
Here's the wage data from the report:
Wal-Mart is also in the top 20 highest-paying retailers, according to Glassdoor data.
Myles Udland contributed to this report.