• breadsmasher@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    If the company cant pay a liveable wage because they will lose money, then that is a failing business.

    If its just “buh shareholders make 1% less” then pay your fucking staff

    socialism for corporations, rugged capitalism for the workers. idiotic.

  • .Donuts@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    Reading the comments on that article was a mistake

    Entry level persons with almost zero skills cannot produce enough profit to pay these high minimum wages. That is why these are known as entry level jobs

    Entry-level jobs are a stepping stone for individuals with little to no prior experience or specialized skills. They are an investment for a company.

    Plus, if you can’t make “enough” profit (what is enough, really?) because of a minimum wage, then maybe your business doesn’t have any right to exist.

    • seaQueue@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      (what is enough, really?)

      All of it, duh. I’m surprised fast food hasn’t gone after $1/hr prison labor in sympathetic states yet

    • AmoxtliOP
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      12 days ago

      Or you don’t have the right to the job.

      • .Donuts@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        That’s fine too. I’m just saying, if you need to pay peanuts to your staff in order to break even, your business plan sucks.

        • AmoxtliOP
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          12 days ago

          If you earn so little money, maybe an education would help. You are not smart enough. It is basic economics, as things get more expensive, the less consumers will spend, and look for better value elsewhere. Higher prices put a bigger economy of scale less reachable by competition. McDonald’s is harmed by supply chain, and labor costs, but even more so, for a small business who wants to compete with cheap food. Starting a business and making sure the business survives is harder than established big business that grew mostly in a less costly regulatory environment. Increasing business costs reduces dynamicism, which reduces competition, and increases stagnation.

          • .Donuts@lemmy.world
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            12 days ago

            If you earn so little money, maybe an education would help. You are not smart enough.

            I don’t appreciate your attempt to make it personal, but I will ignore it because the issue isn’t about individual education levels.

            It’s about fair compensation for work. A sustainable business should be able to pay its employees a livable wage while remaining profitable. If a business can only succeed by underpaying its staff, perhaps it’s the business model that needs rethinking, not the education level of its workers.

          • Scratch@sh.itjust.works
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            12 days ago

            Typical Neo-Liberal garbage.

            People are only valuable if they can feed the machine and make line go up.

  • pdxfed@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    1% of jobs? Is the underlying source accounting for seasonal change or were they a desperate narrative chasing data? Even if the underlying story were true that conservatives like to peddle, that jobs are wrecked by raising minimum wage, the impact takes time to suss out the impact of a single variable on a complex item like employment numbers. You don’t look at one monthly jobs report and cite 6,000 up or down and proclaim one side was right. The fact they quoted a restaurant org rep with an incredibly dramatized quote “industry smashed, struggling to stay afloat” seals the fact this article is propaganda, not analysis or news.

    • G7dX5kWz9V2R@reddthat.com
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      12 days ago

      accounting for seasonal change or chasing data?

      My read on it is they are comparing like for like—in the next paragraph:

      During that same period a year earlier, California fast food restaurants added 17,528 jobs, a 3.1 percent increase over those ten months in 2022 and 2023, the data show.

  • Hikermick@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    Headline should read “99% of California fast food workers now make a livable wage and don’t have to rely on government handouts to survive anymore” but what do you expect from National Review?