So, McDonalds has been holding out on computerized ordering out of the goodness of their hearts? That's just the sweetest story.
yes, it has been in the works for some time. They've developed burger making machines that can produce a ridiculous amount of burgers per hour, all custom made.
Instead of kiosks app ordering would be the way to go. You could use Apple Pay or Google Wallet and order and pay within the app then just pick it up.
No industry is safe. Even creative work, which many thought would be protected, is going to suffer. There are AIs out there that can build a website based on just a few variables. Algorithms have created millions of articles across the web, you've probably read one and not known the difference.
First off, it's asinine to be amused at people losing their jobs. Secondly, it is somewhat scary that this is happening. If you really think about it there are very few jobs in this world that couldn't be done by a machine of some sort. So, even our high and mighty jobs are not really safe from being on the chopping block due to technology that is more efficient or cost effective. Right now, most the jobs that are being lost are those that we don't really care too much about like taxi drivers and fast food workers, but at some point they may very well be taking some of our jobs.
In fact, if you look at the legal industry, many of the jobs are gone because of the efficiency of the internet. 25 years ago the big time law firms often hired 50-100 new law school graduates every year. Those new graduates were sent to the libraries to do research and write briefs and memos. Now, those big law firms are hiring 2-3 attorneys to do the same thing as the 50 because they can now quickly do the research through Lexis Nexis (or Westlaw or similar) rather than having to flip through a ton of books. Not to mention the paperwork is faster simply because computers and their accessories are much faster. Also, legal websites like legalzoom (which you should never use) have also taken some jobs away because people are using this as an alternative to hiring a lawyer.
So many people are laughing about these 'silly little minimum wage workers' wanting more money, and their demands made them lose their jobs to machines, but I fail to see any humor in it.
There's obviously a threshold where it becomes more profitable to runderstand a kiosk tHan pat workers. It's likely that threshold is somewhere between $7.25 and $15 an hour.So, McDonalds has been holding out on computerized ordering out of the goodness of their hearts? That's just the sweetest story.
Lot of "funny" guys on this thread that must have failed economics class.
Listen, Moestradamis.It would be interesting to find out how many times disaster has been predicted from increases in the minimum wage and how many times disaster has followed. Similarly, it would interesting to see how many times inflation has been assured -- and not just inflation, Weimar-level inflation -- and how many times we've had bouts with inflation like that.
I wonder how many times those kinds of predictions need to fail before people accept that maybe something else is afoot.
A burger-making machine probably could make a better burger than their humans now produce.
And to that regard, those people who have been working at McDonald's for several years, maybe worked their way up from minimum wage to a managers position making $15 an hour or so, how do you think they will react to all of the high school 16 year old punks they hire all of a sudden making as much as they are? You can bet the managers won't get a proportionally similar raise, that's for damn sure.The majority of people I see working at McDonalds are high school or college students. The older employees are typically managers, who probably get paid closer to $15 an hour.
Minimum wage jobs aren't meant to support a family on. They are for part timers, new employees to the work force, second jobs, and temporary solutions.
There is a major shortage of workers in the construction industry right now. If people weren't afraid of manual labor, they could be out getting jobs above $10 all day long.
OT: There was a great article in Barrons about a month ago citing the fact that by 2030 half of all jobs will be eliminated due to automation. The McDonalds example is one. Restaurants will no longer have waiters or waitresses. You order from a kiosk and a robot delivers the food to your table. Machines clean everything up. Driverless vehicles which ARE coming sooner than people think will replace truck drivers, everything from local deliveries like UPS to interstate long hauls. Interactive online educational systems will replace teachers, mail will be sorted by machines and delivered in driverless vehicles. More advanced productivity software that can manage records, compile reports, contact, and interact with customers will eliminate white collar jobs.
All these productivity increases will result in increased profits for corporations which is good news for investors but what will all these unemployed millions do?
It is basic economics.
Large minimum wage increases do the following:
1) in the SHORT term they do improve buying power for those that keep their job and hours
2) but also some lose their job, and many more get their hours reduced (so no better or worse off)
3) in LONG term it artificially causes inflation erasing the buying power gains by the few, and hurting everyone else
Efficiency goes up and up, employment decreases proportionately, Skynet ends up running the economy with zero human input, government taxes Skynet's productivity, government redistributes Skynet's tax money to the unemployed masses, unemployed masses spend their money on Skynet's products. Around and around we go.At a certain point it has to be self defeating, how much profit can you make when less and less people have jobs so can they afford to buy your stuff
It is basic economics.
Large minimum wage increases do the following:
1) in the SHORT term they do improve buying power for those that keep their job and hours
2) but also some lose their job, and many more get their hours reduced (so no better or worse off)
3) in LONG term it artificially causes inflation erasing the buying power gains by the few, and hurting everyone else
I'm always amazed that there are people like you and your vote counts the same as someone with the ability to understand basic concepts.I'm always amused that increasing the minimum wage, no matter what amount, "raises prices" but the salaries of the highly paid (such as many on here) has nothing to do with the price of your product. Sheesh.
A $15 hr federal minimum wage is just a number made up to scare people - as if $15 hr or $7.50 hr are the only two options. I'll bet the $15 hr federal minimum wage will not arrive in the next 15 years. There are lots of doable numbers between those two numbers. I don't think $10 hr is outrageous.
It amazes me that decent people are perfectly willing to see a class of people exploited - yes, exploited - by wishing them a wage that no one could live on just to keep the price of a hamburger.down.
McDonalds owners are really having it tough with the high wages they have to pay their employees. Profit margins are so tight that that only 88% of them have more than one store (look it up).
It would be interesting to find out how many times disaster has been predicted from increases in the minimum wage and how many times disaster has followed. Similarly, it would interesting to see how many times inflation has been assured -- and not just inflation, Weimar-level inflation -- and how many times we've had bouts with inflation like that.
I wonder how many times those kinds of predictions need to fail before people accept that maybe something else is afoot.
That's the predicted scenario. When has it actually played out like that?
As if employers keep more people than they actually need and work their employees more extra hours just for the heck of it because the wages are so cheap. If you are the owner of a business you sure wouldn't do that. Neither would you allow a manager of yours have employees he/she doesn't have to have. Yes, prices will have to rise - but your competitor has to raise his prices too.
Employers employ the minimum number of employees they can to run their business. Almost all will need the exact same number of employees after a hike in the minimum wage. I've been hearing that same proclamation of doom since the minimum wage was 50 cents an hour (yea, I'm old),
It has always played out like that. That's the reason the the country is in such bad shape economically now.
The kiosks are not new. Outside the U.S., a lot of McDonald's have them. It is great.
Peck in your order, walk it to counter, pick it up.
OT: There was a great article in Barrons about a month ago citing the fact that by 2030 half of all jobs will be eliminated due to automation. The McDonalds example is one. Restaurants will no longer have waiters or waitresses. You order from a kiosk and a robot delivers the food to your table. Machines clean everything up. Driverless vehicles which ARE coming sooner than people think will replace truck drivers, everything from local deliveries like UPS to interstate long hauls. Interactive online educational systems will replace teachers, mail will be sorted by machines and delivered in driverless vehicles. More advanced productivity software that can manage records, compile reports, contact, and interact with customers will eliminate white collar jobs.
All these productivity increases will result in increased profits for corporations which is good news for investors but what will all these unemployed millions do?
If you benchmark "job creation" from the bottom of a historic recession you are either a moron or an Obamatwat.
The kiosks are not new. Outside the U.S., a lot of McDonald's have them. It is great.
Peck in your order, walk it to counter, pick it up.
You created the comp, not me. But no, not as big....per the Obama administration. Disingenuously working backwards should be beneath such an elitist.You mean like the recession of 1982?
You created the comp, not me. But no, not as big....per the Obama administration. Disingenuously working backwards should be beneath such an elitist.
[eyeroll]
Yup, all of that is happening in the next 14 years. Jesus.
Well if you are actually touting Obama as a job creator, it certainly takes really really wanting that to be true and then constructing arguments around how to make that possibly work....thus using an idiotic benchmark of a historic recession.
His job approval among small business owners has generally been around 30%. Two of the top top job growth areas are temps and the service industry. Wages are down. Lowest amount of people in the workforce since the late 70s. And he used an extra trillion of credit that turned into liquidity to stimulate while the Fed has artificially kept interest rates down.
Just stop.
I think you are confusing the stimulus with TARP. I favored some stimulus but how it was dispersed was a boondoggle. Just a bunch of ex clintonites repaying the loyalists. Interesting to hear HRC talk about letting banks fail now.And you're complaining about the stimulus bill that kept us from the 2nd Great Depression? Fine. I don't think much your understanding and you don't think much of mine.
If the assumptions were true you'd see definite declines in employment following hikes in the minimum wage. I've looked for documentation of that. I'd appreciate a cite if you come up with one. An increase in moaning by commenters isn't the same thing. There are powerful indicators that people have learned to moan on their own.
As for "now", the country is in better shape than it has enjoyed for years. Reagan is the touchstone for conservatives, yes? More jobs have been created under Obama than under Reagan. The size of deficits has steadily declined. The size of the government has steadily declined. I'm at a loss to imagine what conservatives claim they want or what they are so disappointed in. What they want wouldn't be their own hands on the levers of power, would it?
Taxes? Here's a chart that shows government revenue as a % of GDP. Blue is federal gov't. (The last years are projections) The % of federal revenue under Obama has (for the most part; it's about equal now) been less than it was under Reagan. So ( politely) WTF is it you want? More jobs. Lower taxes. Fewer foreign entanglements. Less intrusion into your private concerns.
You may want to check your assumptions. As the old blues lyric goes, if you cry for a nickel you'll die for a dime.
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Let's start with jobs. Adding low paying part time jobs does pad the stats but it doesn't do much for the people who are working them. The fact also remains that the percentage of the population that is currently not in the workforce is at an all time high.
The size of the budget deficit is meaningless. Citing it as anything other than an example of propaganda reduces the credibility of your argument.
I think you are confusing the stimulus with TARP. I favored some stimulus but how it was dispersed was a boondoggle. Just a bunch of ex clintonites repaying the loyalists. Interesting to hear HRC talk about letting banks fail now.
As opposed to what? your stout assertion? The last time I checked stout assertion isn't much of an argument.
The baby boomers are retiring. Expect the % not in the workforce to go higher still.