This one at a Jack in the box.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vDJc1NoGg2g
They are even working on robotic cooks.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vDJc1NoGg2g
They are even working on robotic cooks.
Establishing a "strong minimum wage" doesn't accomplish much, it simply devalues the dollar to where the people making minimum wage still can't afford anything.
McDonalds sells hamburgers for $1 and so does every other fast food burger joint. They're able to do this because they pay everybody $8/hr. If they raise their pay voluntarily then they have to figure out how to keep selling a hamburger for $1 to compete with the other places or they lose market share. If the government steps in and tells all of the restaurants that they have to raise their minimum wage to $15 then they have to make up for that somewhere, they aren't going to decrease their margins, what they do is increase their prices. So now every place only has $2 hamburgers.
Same thing at Walmart or the grocery store, they all raise their prices to cover the new wage increase that is coming out of their bottom line.
Let's say that I own an apartment complex. I rent out apartments for $500 a month because that's the most I can charge and still keep all of the units rented out. Suddenly, all of my tenants get a huge raise. I can now raise the price of my rent and still keep the apartments rented out because now the tenants or prospective tenants have more money. So an apartment just went up to $750.
Gas just went up too because all of the people working at the gas station get that same raise as the people at McDonalds and Walmart.
What most people don't understand is that making companies pay more in wages, taxes, whatever is basically irrelevant to the company. They have a set margin that they are going to hit and a cost increase to them they will simply pass on to the end consumer. The other alternative they have is to fire employees and make the ones they keep do more or they could replace them all with a piece of machinery like a robot cook. What they definitely aren't going to do is lose money.
So those same people that just got a raise now have to pay more for everything to cover the raises that everybody else just got and they're exactly back to where they were in the beginning.
The way for these people to dig themselves out of the hole isn't to hope for a minimum wage increase, it's to get an education, training, whatever it is that they need to do to get a better job. If an employer can hire someone fresh off the street with no training and no education and they can be doing the job within a week then the people with those jobs will forever be at the bottom of the wage scale.
Many that are making minimum wage are on government assistance programs. Are these businesses that can't pay a living wage and force taxpayers to subsidise their workers really worthwhile?
Many that are making minimum wage are on government assistance programs. Are these businesses that can't pay a living wage and force taxpayers to subsidise their workers really worthwhile?
When did minimum wage get tied to a "living wage"? My 16 year old son does not need to be making a living wage at Burger King, nor do I want him to. I want him to drive to get skills tag are in demand. And those skills change as time passes and needed to be sharpened from time to time.
So, I can assume that you don't mind your tax money going to pay for government assistance for adult workers at McDonald's, Walmart, etc (No, I'm not talking about high school and college age part time workers).
So, I can assume that you don't mind your tax money going to pay for government assistance for adult workers at McDonald's, Walmart, etc (No, I'm not talking about high school and college age part time workers).
A higher minimum wage does not devalue the dollar. Quantitative easing does.
You have to raise the minimum wage because of QE.
I do mind. Entry level jobs are not careers. They need to improve their skills and move up like millions of us have done.
Many that are making minimum wage are on government assistance programs. Are these businesses that can't pay a living wage and force taxpayers to subsidise their workers really worthwhile?
A higher minimum wage does not devalue the dollar. Quantitative easing does. You have to raise the minimum wage because of QE.
There's zero evidence of that. Inflation is running at 1.5%.