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Business

Amazon Prime Days bring out waves of unhappy employees

Amazon's Prime Day comes with a wave of deals and protests from Amazon workers who complain about unrealistic expectations from the online retailer.

Over 2 days in summer, Amazon offers millions of deals and workers say they're hard-pressed to meet demand

A worker pushes bins at an Amazon fulfillment centre in Baltimore. Some Amazon workers are protesting the relentless pace of Prime Days. (Patrick Semansky/Associated Press)

Amazon's Prime Day comes with a wave of deals and protests from Amazon workers.

The company's fifth annual Prime Day now stretches two days, Monday and Tuesday, invented as an effort to try to drum up sales during sluggish summer months and sign up more users for its Prime loyalty program.

But with Amazon promising one-day delivery to customers, its employees have complained about the unrelenting pace of the work and the low pay.

Workers in Germany struck on Monday and in the U.K., a week of walkouts is planned, as employees say they are treated like automatons.

At a warehouse in Shakopee, Minnesota, workers planned a strike to raise awareness for workers' conditions. A group of tech workers in Seattle, called Amazon Employees for Climate Justice, is supporting the strike.

Amazon touts its pay scale

On Twitter, Massachusetts Senator and presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren voiced her support for the workers as well.

Amazon says it already offers what the workers are asking for.

"We provide great employment opportunities with excellent pay ranging from $16.25-$20.80 US an hour, and comprehensive benefits including health care, up to 20 weeks parental leave, paid education, promotional opportunities, and more," spokeswoman Brenda Alfred said in a statement in response to the planned strike.

The company has faced labour unrest before in Shakopee and in Europe.

In New York, a coalition of labour groups planned to deliver 250,000 petitions to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos' Manhattan home calling on the company to cut business ties with ICE and end abusive working conditions in its warehouses. And some on Twitter called for a blanket boycott of Amazon during Prime Day.

San Diego State University Marketing Professor Steven Osinski said the protests were unlikely to have an effect on sales, however.

Appetite for discounts

"I don't think it will have an impact, Americans liking discounts will trump worrying about higher wages for two days," he said.

The Seattle-based e-commerce behemoth said it is offering more than a million deals. Amazon's own products are usually among the strongest sellers.

Other retailers have introduced sales to compete against Prime Day. Walmart has a "summer savings event" through Wednesday. Best Buy, EBay, Target and other retailers are also offering discounts.

"It's something that shows you the power of Amazon that almost every other retailer is trying to capitalize on the traffic we're seeing online today with promotions by just about everybody," said Morningstar analyst R.J. Hottovy.

Some people may have delayed purchases until Prime Day, or are making back-to-school shopping purchases ahead of that season.

"Amazon has changed the consumer psychology in terms of summer shopping," he said.

The company says it has more than 100 million subscribers to its Prime loyalty program, which costs $119 a year and provides free two-day shipping, free streaming movies, TV shows, and music and other perks.