McDonald's and Chipotle said they will raise menu prices in California to pay for the minimum wage hikes that Gov. Gavin Newsom recently signed into law.
3,000,000,000÷ 2,200,000 = 1,363 dollars or 163 dollars a month. Thats still not a decent wage. I think you think I'm on McDonald's side. I'm not, but I also don't think you understand, why it would still be necessary to raise prices on their food to pay a good bit higher wage.
I’m not, but I also don’t think you understand, why it would still be necessary to raise prices on their food to pay a good bit higher wage.
You're right, I definitely don't understand.
$163/month, globally for all employees, does absolutely nothing for a person (and yeah, that's sarcasm, when I was working equivalent level jobs, about another $.80/hour after taxes would have been nice) and isn't an example of the company going for profits over employees. Besides, we're only talking about California getting the price increase right? I mean they're not going to look at raising prices everywhere. So... Let's look at the state.
According to the this website a Big Mac in California, on average is $5.89.
Average starting rate in California appears to be $16-18/hour for crew members according to generic "mcdonalds hiring search followed by a city name... So, we'll call it $17/hour to start? Makes sense that they'd need to raise the prices.
Not a big fan of McDonald's, I wonder how that's going to affect me at the equivalent fast food place in the same state that I like: In-n-Out.
According to this site there was already a price hike in 2023 on the cost of the double-double by 24%, guess it's only going to get worse. $4.90 for that Big-Mac equivalent of a double-double. Huh, this is going to suck.
Starting pay at In-n-Out for a crew member is, let me see... The In-n-Out employment page shows the starting pay for crew members is $19.75/hr at any store I select.
So, two chains in the same state selling, pretty much the same product, doing the same work with an average pay differential of $2.75/hour.
You're absolutely right, McD's really does need to bump the price.
A double double is not the same as a big mac, a double cheeseburger is probably closer and its 2.97 in California. And probably 10 cents more to add lettuce. It is true that the dd is a bit bigger but not twice as much, and not as big as the double qpc. Mcdonalds is trash anyway.
Two beef patties
1000 Island dressing (special sauce)
Lettuce
Cheese
Onions (raw by default, grilled on request)
Toasted Bun
You're absolutely correct. The difference between the two is staggering. I didn't realize sesame seeds and the extra piece of bun they stick in the middle of a Big Mac costs that much more.
Pickles, well, you can say "double-double with pickles" and they'll put them on at no extra cost. I suggest not making the mistake of saying "extra pickles" vs. "add pickles". They take it as a challenge.