A Target employee says she only got a measly 2% raise — after 5 years of working there. How to keep up with inflation even if your paycheck hasn't

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A Target employee says she only got a measly 2% raise — after 5 years of working there. How to keep up with inflation even if your paycheck hasn't
A Target employee says she only got a measly 2% raise — after 5 years of working there. How to keep up with inflation even if your paycheck hasn't

Employees of retail giant Target have turned to TikTok, Reddit and other social media platforms to raise awareness and find solidarity among other cash-strapped colleagues about pay raises they say miss the mark.

In a viral TikTok clip published in April, Kaitlin Sondae, who says she’s worked at Target for five years, details her most recent hourly pay raise.

“I was making $15.61. Now I make $15.92 — it’s a 2% raise, and I got 31 cents,” Sondae said, before letting out a sarcastic “Yay!” about the extra $12.40 she could earn in a 40-hour work week.

That amount of money won’t go far in today’s inflationary, high-interest-rate environment. If you’re in the same boat as Sondae and your paycheck is failing to meet your needs, there are several things you can do to attempt to breach that financial gap.

Retail woes

Sondae regularly posts TikTok videos about her experiences working at Target — including one, where she thought it would be “funny” to share details of the miniscule pay raises she’s had in the past five years.

“It’s kind of sad,” she told viewers while displaying her previous tiny raises of 0.9%, 1% and 2% — with two of those raises apparently being wiped out following store-wide pay bumps.

“Yes, it could be better, but it’s also Target, so it is what it is at this point,” she said before adding another unenthusiastic “Yay!”

Sondae’s experience is by no means alien to retail workers. A trend on social media has seen employees blasting their measly pay bumps.

The first video mentioned was featured in another viral TikTok clip where a former retail worker named Sydney says she started working at $10 an hour in 2016 — and never made it above $11 after four years.

Sydney’s clip drew lots of comments, including one from somebody who said they once received a three-cent raise to their hourly wage, adding: “I honestly would have been less insulted with no raise at all.”

The big problem with these small wage increases is they’re not keeping up with inflation. The annual inflation rate in 2022 was 6.5% — significantly higher than the 2% raise Sondae was complaining about.

It is common for companies to offer cost-of-living adjustments to ensure employee wages keep up with inflation, but they are not obligated to do so.

Target announced plans last year to set a new starting wage range from $15 to $24 for hourly team members. However, the retail giant said the exact starting wage would “depend on the job and the local market.”

Regardless, that policy would guarantee Target workers are paid over double the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour (although minimum wages do vary by state).