Posted on 08/11/2015 5:45:11 PM PDT by thomasryan
I thought the lunatic libs said a $15 minimum wage wouldn’t cost jobs. Liberalism is based entirely on emotion.
Surprise!
Oh my...unintended consequences! Increasing the minimum wage helps poor people by giving them less jobs. Democrat logic, not mine.
Wendy’s is going to need to invent a robot to scrape up the burger patties that fall on the floor and toss them into the chili pot.
Ironically most of the fired employees will be Progressive Millenial useful idiots that supported the wage hike.
Welcome to Reality, punks.
[ Wendys is going to need to invent a robot to scrape up the burger patties that fall on the floor and toss them into the chili pot. ]
Humanoid robots will eventually replace the fast food worker.
Plus,the robot won’t spit in your food.
I work in a fine dining restaurant-not affected yet. The rumors are that we are about to be replaced with iPads at every table. They will keep the young and cute servers (who usually get lower tips than the experienced servers) to run food and let the rest of us go. When a long time server said something about it affecting tips, the manager stated, “You’re not a doctor, you don’t need to be making $30 an hour.”
No one here wants minimum wage to go up as it only means less money for us. As it goes up, people can expect service to go down.
Sheetz already does this. They’re in PA and perhaps elsewhere. People make the food (and it’s pretty good) but the ordering is all done through a computer terminal. Fast and efficient, with no “language problem” from the cashier.
Cost of talent?
I see middle aged men with degrees struggling for pay in the tech sector.
Effa burger flippers
of course
bump
No, it is based on Marxism. Ooops, same thing.
We have two convenience chains in the Carolina’s that use these kiosks. Sheetz has a decent menu and I can get a cheeseburger on toasted white bread with all the fixins’ imaginable.
System works very well.
There is the real rub.
Doctors are expected to make $30 the Hour?
Are you sure of that?
“At the NRA Show in May, for instance, Hudson Riehle, head of the research and knowledge group at the National Restaurant Association, noted that restaurants average $84,000 in sales per worker. By comparison, grocery stores average $304,000. And gas stations average $855,000.”
Well, that’s interesting. A clever bit of sophistry; but, interesting.
The models don’t support direct comparisons. The true measure is GROSS MARGIN per worker. The gross margins in the restaurant business are notably higher (as a percent of sales revenue) than in grocery or gasoline.
Yep
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