hopemax
Note to Self:
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2000
- Messages
- 7,837
As long as they have an ample pool of people wanting to work at Disney and agreeing to do the job listed at the pay listed (again, nobody forced these people to take a minimum wage job at Disney-- they applied for it) then Disney has no real incentive to pay more.
I agree with ICF, if there weren't thousands of people who were willing to work for Disney at the current salaries, and they had difficulty finding people to fill the jobs, then the pay rate would go up.
Just remember, that these so called "thousands lined up" are not from the local labor pool. Here's an article from 1998 that talks about where Disney has started filling its labor needs. And now we're 16 years later, and Disney is 16 years more invested in that process.
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/...ns-disney-theme-parks-disney-s-animal-kingdom
That's something that Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations capitalism never predicted. That profit makers would "short circuit" the local economy. So if you're sitting around waiting for local market conditions to warrant labor cost increases, you'll be waiting a very long time, because you have to wait for the global labor market to change. There will always be a location from where the big multi-nationals can "import" their labor from, to avoid wage increases that the local economy might have required otherwise.
But again, many of these imported bodies are temporary. They never gain any mastery which will allow Disney's system to operate efficiency. And "mastery" is even more important now with the amount of technology Disney has introduced into its parks. Registers are computers, the attractions are computers and machines, the turnstyles and ticket handling, My Magic+ is all technology oriented. You can't just grab a person off the street, hand them a datapad, dump them at the Wait Times Board and tell them "help guests with FP+" in the same way that in 1972, Disney could hire someone off the street and say "collect E-tickets." Disney's jobs increasingly are becoming skilled positions.
Something's gonna give, and given the lack of understanding Disney has regarding its own theme park operations that they have shown during the My Magic+ rollout, I am not positive that Disney will A. recognize the deficiencies, B. Since they are a behemoth now, be able to move quickly enough to rectify it.
In the last 23 years, my salary has magnified a LOT. It didn't come just from yearly raises. It happened because I busted my tail and used downtime to learn other, better paying jobs. Sometimes that meant coming in during my time off. Sometimes that meant cutting a lunch break short. Sometimes that meant utilizing my "downtime". I talked to coworkers and asked them to teach me what they do. I was able to move up the ranks. Promotions = more pay. 
