• @Jelly_mcPB
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    11 year ago

    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.

    • flying_monkies
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      fedilink
      11 year ago

      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.

      • @Jelly_mcPB
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        11 year ago

        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.

        • flying_monkies
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          fedilink
          11 year ago

          A double double is not the same as a big mac

          Really, let’s see… If I remember the commercial correctly:

          Big Mac:

          Two all beef patties
          Special Sauce (1000 Island dressing)
          Lettuce
          Cheese
          Pickles
          Onions
          on a sesame seed bun

          Double Double:

          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.

          • @Jelly_mcPB
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            11 year ago

            I wonder the shipping cost of tens of thousands of McDonald’s vs the less than 400 in-n-outs?