Site icon The Punching Bag Post

The National Restaurant Association Argues Against Raising the Minimum Wage to $15

<p>Ever since last April when Sen&period; Patrick Murphy and Rep&period; Bobby Scott introduced the Raise the Minimum Wage Act&comma; which would surge the national hourly wage from &dollar;7&period;25 to &dollar;12 within the next five years&comma; organizations are speaking out against it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To address this problem&comma; there was a panel discussion on Capital Hill&comma; sponsored by the Competitive Enterprise Institute &lpar;CEI&period;&rpar; Alfonso Amador&comma; the senior vice president of labor and workforce policy at the National Restaurant Association &lpar;NRA&comma;&rpar; expressed his group&rsquo&semi;s concerns stating &ldquo&semi;There seems to be a perception that every job needs to be able to maintain a family of four&period; Not every job is there to sustain a family of four&period;&rdquo&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>His statements correspond with the NRA&rsquo&semi;s stance against this act&period; Here&rsquo&semi;s what the trade association states on its website&colon; &ldquo&semi;As businesses struggle to recover from the economic recession&comma; dramatic&comma; mandatory wage increases would place yet another financial burden on business owners who are already feeling the pressures of a weak economy and additional costs and regulatory complexity associated with the Affordable Care Act&period;&rdquo&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The NRA speaks on the behalf of the foodservice industry&comma; which is the second-largest private-sector employer with over 14 million workers&period; Foodservice employees make up a whopping 10 &percnt; of the country&rsquo&semi;s entire workforce&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Restaurant operators have low profit margins and are already devoting one third of their sales to employee wages and benefits&period; According to research from the NRA&comma; the last time the minimum wage was increased in 2007&comma; the industry reduced costs elsewhere&period; This had a negative impact not only on consumers&comma; but also on the workers&period; 48&percnt; of restaurant operators increased menu pricing and 41&percnt; reduced employee hours&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So with a wage raise like this&comma; all businesses will cut corners in other ways&period; &ldquo&semi;Millions of workers are getting a raise&comma; but those raises come at a cost&period; Other workers directly pay for those raises through reduced hours&comma; firings&comma; benefit cuts&comma; and other harms&period; Those workers and would-be workers have few defenders&comma;&rdquo&semi; said Ryan Young of the CEI&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>We are already seeing this happen on a state level&period; In New York&comma; where the minimum wage recently made a jump from &dollar;8&period;75 to &dollar;9 an hour&comma; this has caused businesses to eliminate employee hours&period; So consider this&comma; at a &dollar;8&period;75 wage for 40 hours&comma; that equals roughly &dollar;350 a week before taxes&period; While&comma; at a &dollar;9 an hour for 29 hours that equals roughly &dollar;261 a week before taxes&period; So&comma; that means that they will either have to get another part time job to make what they made previously&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

Exit mobile version