Posted on 07/11/2015 8:59:56 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
If you’re out on the left coast and heading out for some tasty Chipotle goodness tonight, be prepared to dig a little deeper when you pay the check. Prices are going up and it’s not just because of the cost of beef. (From the Chicago Tribune)
In its weekly survey of 10 Chipotle markets, Chicago-based William Blair found that Chipotle raised prices in half of the markets that the investment firm surveyed San Francisco, Chicago, Denver, Minneapolis and Orlando. In most markets, the price increases occurred due to the rising cost of beef.
The city by the bay, however, saw across-the-board price increases averaging 10.5 percent, and William Blair theorizes “the outsized San Francisco price hike was likely because of the increased minimum wages.”
In contrast, prices in Chicago, Denver, Minneapolis and Orlando each rose about half a percentage point, nearly entirely due to higher beef prices.
San Francisco’s minimum wage was $10.74 an hour in 2014, rose to $11.05 at the start of the year, and increased again to $12.25 in May.
Like any other business, Chipotle has to compete with everyone else in their market space. They have a minimum profit threshold to meet, but if they try to pad the bill too much while seeking better profits their competitors will eat them alive. So all of the eateries in the race for the consumer dollar are charging pretty much the least they can while still remaining profitable. What did you think was going to happen when you suddenly jacked up their labor costs? They don’t have a magical money tree out behind the corporate office where they can just go pluck a few extra billion dollars. Their revenue comes from selling food, so when their costs go up, the prices go up. This should not be daunting math for anyone to comprehend.
But so what if everything is going to cost more? According to Alison Griswold at Slate, if you’re fat and sassy enough to be dining out at a fancy joint like Chipotle, you can afford to spread around a little more cash in the name of social progress.
Don’t sound the burrito-flation alarm too quickly, because this might all be a decent thing. Yes, your burrito options in the Bay Area just got 7 to 14 percent more expensive. But on top of the aforementioned rising beef costs, wages in San Francisco and Oakland went up by 14 to 36 percent. The news for your wallet seems especially untroubling when you think about just how price-insensitive Chipotle burritos are. In the past, Chipotle has been able to raise prices between 4 and 8 percent without customers flinching. The thinking is that people who eat at Chipotle tend to have a bit more disposable income, so they find price increases less off-putting and are also generally willing to pay more for what the fast-casual dining experience offers.
Odds are Chipotle knows that, and could have gotten away with hiking its menu costs even more in the San Francisco area. But it didnt. So for you, the price of workers getting paid more will be roughly a dollar. That seems like a pretty good deal.
See? It’s all good. Only rich people eat at Chipotle anyway, right?
That’s precisely the short sighted sort of social engineering mindset you find in progressive think tanks around the nation. Fear not, comrades, for the plight of the little guy shall be improved and we’ll just drain a bit more cash out of the fat cats to cover the tab. Except lunch at Chipotle isn’t really on part with shopping for a new Boeing BBJ7, now is it? Some of the people eating at Chipotle are families or young people with student loans to pay off. (You remember them, right? Wasn’t that a thing during the last election?) And jacking up the prices by 14% might not seem like much to you, but for some of them it’s going to translate into going to McDonald’s instead. Or maybe just staying home because the folks at the Golden Arches are going to have to raise their prices also.
So you push through a huge, sudden spike in the minimum wage and consumer prices rise to match. Who on Earth could have seen that one coming?
But it has nothing to do with the minimum wage hike. Just like Muslims beheading humans has nothing to do with Islam.
Who remembers the luxury tax on yachts?
During the Carter administration it was decided rich yacht owners should pay a hefty tax when they purchase a new boat. Ruined yacht supply, building and sales because people held onto their yachts.
I was living down in South Jersey at that time and that tax almost put Viking Yacht in New Gretna,NJ out of business. They laid lots of people off and held on.
” isnt really **on part** with shopping”
#Fail
Can’t blame this one on Carter. It was the first Bush who signed it into law. From Wikipedia:
“In November 1991, The United States Congress enacted a luxury tax and was signed by the former President George H.W. Bush. The goal of the tax was to generate additional revenues to reduce the federal budget deficit. This tax was levied on material goods such as watches, expensive furs, boats, yachts, private jet planes, jewelry and expensive cars. Congress enacted a 10 percent luxury surcharge tax on boats over $100,000, cars over $30,000, aircraft over $250,000, and furs and jewelry over $10,000. The federal government estimated that it would raise $9 billion in excess revenues over the following five-year period. However, only two years after its imposition, in August 1993, the Congress decided to eliminate the luxury tax since it did not achieve its main objective. The tax revenues generated were disappointing and unsatisfactory for the Congress and it also negatively impacted the incomes of the sellers of the luxury items. However, the luxury automobile tax remained in effect until 2006.”
And the yachting business that didn’t fold often just left the country. People with the means to own yachts can afford to keep them somewhere outside of the US.
Except lunch at Chipotle isnt really on part with shopping for a new Boeing BBJ7
************************************************************************
“On part”? Did the author mean, “on par”?
Kerry parks his yacht in another state to avoid home state taxes. And yet he advocates higher taxes on everything else for you and me.
SF is pretty much “heaven on earth”
Just ask the friends and relatives of Kate Steinle, right?
The simple answer: price controls. < /liberallogic >
Try making your own... I do.
That same idiocy nearly destroyed the small aircraft industry here.
I remember the luxury tax under Clinton
The Democrats are expert at creating extreme wealth gap between rich and poor (with less and less folks in the middle and lower economic opportunities for those at the bottom to actually advance themselves and get ahead).
Most of the socalled “middle class” cannot afford $1,500,000 ticky=tacky row houses or bungalows, $6 coffees and $10 burgers. Soon, even the Google/Tech workers in SF will be priced out of town ... leaving pretty much just the wealthy immigrants from communist China ... and the very poor.
It was part of that Lip Reading thing as I recall.
I doubt I will ever visit San Francisco again.
Years ago, the Company I worked for had their Headquarters located there.
Not having been there in a while, I had to Fly up to attend some Meetings.
What struck me back then was the sheer number of Pan Handlers and Bums roaming the Streets. I think this was when Feinstein was running the place.
It has only gotten worse.
It most certainly should have been “on par” but we don’t need editors or a command of the language in order to opine on the Interwebz cuz spell check, dude, and Whatever, you grammar Nazi! j/k Graybeard58, just a sample of the usual invective from the unwashed masses.
Buy them overseas, keep them somewhere else. Yea, Bush I really screwed the U.S. Boat building industry.
Convenience store are taking a considerable amount of the fast food business. Their costs are lower and thus the prices are lower. Convenience stores are mostly self serve. The faster the food the more susceptible it is to labor costs due to being lower margin already. McDonald’s has apparently taken a huge hit. I read speculation that they will close as many as 20% of their locations.
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