Ok. So the prices stay the same. McD's just lays off more people and brings in automation that much sooner. So it would be wonderful for the 3 people working the store that make their $15/hr. I still don't see how that benefits anyone except the 3 people they decide to keep.
8/29/2013 2:03:47 PM
^Yep, so right now, we live in a world where the only thing that matters is capital. Not who does the work, just who owns what and we're creating a system that only rewards those people. Is that acceptable? Are people only commodities? What are the new unemployed to do? Sell drugs like in The Wire? Form new black markets?[Edited on August 29, 2013 at 2:08 PM. Reason : a]
8/29/2013 2:07:15 PM
^^automation software and hardware system workers are now making, high paying jobs. Skilled labor now maintains the systems. You just created, high paying jobs in america. ^We need to find a way to make the tax code favorable for employee-owned companies and give them an advantage over corporations.
8/29/2013 2:18:44 PM
I'm pretty urea CaelNCSU is trolling
8/29/2013 2:30:16 PM
McDonalds employs around 440,000 people.Annual revenue is $ 27 Billion.Annual profit is maybe $ 6 billion or so.So for every employee they made about $ 60,000 revenue and $ 13,000 profit. Although I might have minced the global and US figures. These figures come out to about $9 of profit for each hour of employee's work.
8/29/2013 2:37:13 PM
^^Nah, I just don't think there are many opportunities for entry level work. The trends I see coming are going to make the poor have a harder time. Free markets coupled with automation just enrich those that have the capital the less they have to depend on labor, "Pardon me, I can't pay you an extra $100 a week, my wife and I enjoy a bottle of Screaming Eagle". Something has to change if you want those people to have a civic obligation to society and feel like they are part of the system. You can't just fuck them harder and write them off.[Edited on August 29, 2013 at 2:43 PM. Reason : a]
8/29/2013 2:40:57 PM
If you aren't rolling then you need to go and read my posts again.I'm not saying that "free markets are moral, money is all that matters, blah bah bah," I'm saying, very clearly I think, that raising the wage to $15 will not help the current workers.
8/29/2013 2:47:18 PM
Someone mentioned that the government should just provide all of the basic resources and that salary should only serve as a supplement to basic needs. That is probably the best solution thus far.
8/29/2013 2:51:32 PM
^^^^http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McDonald%27s#Facts_and_figures
8/29/2013 2:52:59 PM
8/29/2013 3:09:58 PM
^^ Your employee number is global, but how do you know your financial data is global?
8/29/2013 3:21:52 PM
Pretty sure there is no separate financial data for non-US McDonald's. It's a US based country and they report global numbers when they report financials.http://www.aboutmcdonalds.com/content/dam/AboutMcDonalds/Investors/Investor%202013/2012%20Annual%20Report%20Final.pdf
8/29/2013 3:25:55 PM
minimum wage is effectively a system of tax deduction and credits. knowing that, there are more effective ways to achieve the desired result. a blog i read recently explains it pretty well, so i'm not going to bother with an explanation (since it would be mostly redundant to what they wrote)Tax Structure vs. Minimum Wagehttp://www.americanteeth.org/2013/08/26/tax-structure-vs-minimum-wage/
8/29/2013 3:47:13 PM
8/29/2013 4:08:58 PM
People who have completed college usually bring more to the table than simply having a degree. Many (not all, maybe not even most) have acquired things like discipline, the ability to problem solve, to think independently, etc. Many companies don't even care what your degree is in, just having one shows a lot and brings with it implied value regardless of the skill set required for the job.
8/29/2013 4:14:08 PM
and that's not even mentioning criminal records, etc...
8/29/2013 4:37:44 PM
I'm gonna be pissed if I can't get me a new Deluxe quarter-pounder with cheese today, goddamnit. 'Murica.
8/29/2013 5:17:33 PM
I don't understand why we're so concerned with the health of the fast food industry. Bottom-tier fast food establishments take a significant hit while their remaining workers get better-paid. This is a win/win scenario.
8/29/2013 6:03:54 PM
And a terrible proposition for those that go from $7.25 to $0. But hey, the other are getting $15.Double the pay, half the people...seems about how the market works in the real world and not lala feel good land.
8/29/2013 6:22:32 PM
^ Yeah I'm sure a global, billion dollar business can't figure another way to save on costs.
8/29/2013 6:25:13 PM
^ IIRC the number one and number two costs of most fast food businesses is food and labor. While there is a little wiggle room in food costs, there's more room in labor costs. At a certain point automation becomes cheaper than labor (see self check out stations).
8/29/2013 6:44:58 PM
8/29/2013 6:59:11 PM
i appreciate that you followed mrfrog's link, but that's not what this isthey will be replaced by people more qualified and will then have to compete with others for unskilled jobs
8/29/2013 7:28:45 PM
8/29/2013 9:34:50 PM
8/29/2013 10:01:43 PM
8/30/2013 12:05:42 AM
^^ both revenue and margin have increased by a good margin for McDonalds in 2011 and 2012.https://www.google.com/finance?q=NYSE%3AMCD&fstype=iiSurely you're right about some other businesses, and maybe the market as a whole.
8/30/2013 7:16:15 AM
8/30/2013 11:47:19 AM
^as has been mentioned multiple times, australia's standard of living is much higher than america's
8/30/2013 12:09:32 PM
or any of the actual responses when it was posted
8/30/2013 12:20:02 PM
Point being... it's possible.
8/30/2013 4:36:45 PM
8/30/2013 7:49:02 PM
8/30/2013 9:26:24 PM
Raleigh!!1http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/08/why-the-fast-food-worker-strikes-are-doomed/279179/
8/30/2013 10:07:21 PM
ITT White privileged people try to talk about surviving and raising a family on minimum wage.Also, there's this:
8/31/2013 2:33:39 AM
Let's look at this "ermagherd McD Australia pays workerz $15/hr!!1!" argument...At current exchange rates, that would be $13.3508 American; check the value here (changes day to day): http://www.xe.com/currencyconverter/convert/?Amount=15&From=AUD&To=USDWe still, however, need to adjust for purchasing-power parity (PPP), so let's compare the GDP figures for Australia, computed using exchange rates and PPP.The 2012 GDP for Australia in US dollars, according to the World Bank, was $1,520,608,083,022: http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.MKTP.CDThe 2012 GDP for Australia in "International Dollars," each of which has the same purchasing power in each country that the US dollar has in the US (that is, GDP by PPP), was $1,011,639,399,650: http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.MKTP.PP.CD/countries/order%3Dwbapi_data_value_2012%20wbapi_data_value%20wbapi_data_value-last?order=wbapi_data_value_2012%20wbapi_data_value%20wbapi_data_value-last&sort=desc&display=defaultThis means that a US dollar buys just under 2/3 as much in Australia as in the US, so the PPP equivalent of a McD Australia base wage in America would be about $8.88/hr; of course this can fluctuate, like when I first looked this up I saw the USD was worth about 1.04AUD rather than today's approximation of 1.12353AUD, and running the numbers would have given a PPP-equivalent US wage of about $9.60/hr.A more robust calculation can be done with the IMF figures, in which the "International Dollar" was worth about 1.533AUD (as an aside the AUD was worth about $1.0359 on average), meaning the McD Australia base wage for 2012 was about $9.78/hr: http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2013/01/weodata/weorept.aspx?sy=2012&ey=2012&ssm=1&scsm=1&scc=1&ssd=1&sic=1&ssc=1&sort=country&ds=.&br=1&pr1.x=19&pr1.y=2&c=193&s=NGDP_R%2CNGDP%2CNGDPD%2CPPPGDP%2CPPPEX&grp=0&a=[Edited on August 31, 2013 at 4:01 AM. Reason : so that's how McDonald's Australia pays all its workers at least $15/hour
8/31/2013 3:41:45 AM
8/31/2013 4:38:48 AM
^ThisThose idiots are going to price themselves out of a job, any way you slice it.
8/31/2013 7:47:53 AM
^^^. It is NOT 15 Australian dollars... Did you even click the link? It is usd 14.50, which has been approximated to 15 in the headline.The link even has a link to a PDF file with actual salaries.http://www.sdansw.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Proposed-Agreement-Wage-Tables1.pdfActually, the pay is dependent on age, and for 21 year olds, it ranges from aus$ 19-22+. Not only that, but the pay increases significantly every year, and that 19-22 becomes 21-25 starting July 2016. It is all in the table.Even 18 year olds are currently getting aus$ 13-16, and this rises to 15-18 in 2016.That puts a significant dent in your argument, in which you anyway managed to show that the pay is still higher than in the US even in international dollars. You managed to show that the pay is 9.78 int dollars, and that's exactly what the workers in the US would be happy to settle for. Remember, their demand of 15 is an initial starting figure for negotiation, and they would gladly settle for 10.What the heck, I was going to let you redo the calculations, but I will do them for you.All dollar figures are in "International Dollars" (for salaries in USD, multiply given values by 1.533)Pay in McD in Australia for:21 year olds: 11.00 - 13.23, rising to 12.24 - 14.72 in 201618 year olds: 7.70 - 9.26, rising to 8.57 - 10.31 in 201616 year olds: 5.50 - 6.61, rising to 6.12 - 7.36 in 2016For other ages, see table and convert.Considering those who are career workers or starting to become career workers there, it is safe to assume that they are 20+ years old. The pay in aus in mcd is at least 11 in int dollars, so again, as I said, after starting with a demand of 15, they would be happy to settle for around 10 or 11.So I don't know, you started off trying to debunk the higher pay, but even with your false (lower) base figures for your calculations, you still proved the point that they are getting significantly higher pay in aus, unless you think 9.78 and 7.25 are approximately equal(?). And actually, it is 11 vs. 7.25.
8/31/2013 9:16:12 AM
I guess what I was really trying to do was show just *how* to take PPP into account, and indeed it looks like McDonald's workers in Australia who are at least 21 were already making at least 18.30AUD per hour, while some teens were making less than our minimum wage in terms of purchasing power.I'm sorry for assuming the widely-cited "$15/hr" figure was (a) precise to the cent and (b) in AUD; this figure is more significant than it looked before.
8/31/2013 9:54:36 AM
18.94. Not 18.30. See second column, which gives salaries from June. File is from may, so "current pay" is not current any more.And that 18.94 corresponds to exactly 11 in int dollars using conversion factors you gave.My real position regarding this issue is in the chit chat thread.And yes, you did show how to take PPP in to account. Something I think a lot about in my daily life but never bothered to research it. Thanks, I learnt some thing here.[Edited on August 31, 2013 at 10:27 AM. Reason : ]
8/31/2013 10:22:52 AM
8/31/2013 10:23:27 AM
8/31/2013 7:36:42 PM
^^ the chain reaction effect of your proposition (well if those guys are now making $15/hr, then these guys should be making...) is inflation, that's what you are describing.now I don't know if there are enough mcdonalds employees to have that effect, which is why I was only making the point that the jobs would go to different people, but if the minimum wage was increased or other groups got raised then it would just create inflation. so now those workers would be making twice as much, but the buying power of that salary would be no higher than now.
8/31/2013 8:20:09 PM
^prices overall would likely inflate to a degree, but I think it's unlikely they would increase at the same rate as wages. Prices still need to remain competitive, and former prices will stay in the back of people's minds making competition even more important. Whoever can create the most competitive price (likely by cutting back on franchise fees/shareholders/dividends etc) will win
8/31/2013 8:40:59 PM
Prices for the product/food at Fast food merchants would skyrocket so merchants can still make profits. This would really hurt small business models. places like McDonalds and CFA would be able to get away with it though because they are massive, successful businesses.
8/31/2013 11:01:47 PM
8/31/2013 11:07:53 PM
and that doesn't change the point that those people will be losing their jobs to more qualified people
8/31/2013 11:27:49 PM
^but you are ignoring the fact that people currently making $15 are going to renegotiate with their boss for more money. Jobs that need higher qualified workers WILL pay more to get those workers, and keep the ones that are currently doing a great job. I do agree that some deadbeat fast food workers are going to suddenly lose their job at higher wages, but it won't be anywhere near the majority if them.
9/1/2013 12:55:36 AM
^ no, McD's and similar business will just being investing more heavily in automation to get rid of uneducated and unskilled workers who are demanding more in salary that many college graduates make.set em up --------->]
9/2/2013 1:42:36 PM