Critics would have you believe that upping the minimum wage in restaurants will lead to massive layoffs and closures. But since raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour nearly a year ago, the restaurant industry in New York City has thrived.
I'm a professor with a focus on labor and employment law. My research on the minimum wage Critics would have you believe that upping the minimum wage in restaurants will lead to massive layoffs and closures. But since raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour nearly a year ago, the restaurant industry in New York City has thrived.
I'm a professor with a focus on labor and employment law. My research on the minimum wage suggests a few reasons why this might be true.
The article goes on to explain why the rise in the minimum wage has not been as bad as had been predicted; in fact, it claims the both restaurant revenue and employment are up.
However, these claims are contradicted by 2 Anonymous Coward submissions, which could be from the same AC but we cannot tell, of the same story from the New York Post:
https://nypost.com/2019/09/30/as-predicted-the-15-wage-is-killing-jobs-all-across-the-city/
Just as predicted, the $15 minimum wage is killing vulnerable city small businesses, with the low-margin restaurant industry one of the hardest-hit as it also faces a separate mandatory wage hike for tipped staffers.
In Sunday's Post, Jennifer Gould Keil reported on the death of Gabriela's Restaurant and Tequila Bar — closing after 25 years. It struggled all year to find a way out, gradually laying off most non-tipped employees, including some chefs, only to find that quality suffered and customers fled. Owners Liz and Nat Milner finally hung it up.
Other eateries share the pain. In an August survey of its members, the NYC Hospitality Alliance found more than three-quarters have had to cut employee hours, more than a third eliminated jobs last year and half plan to cut staff this year.
"It's death by a thousand cuts," the Hospitality Alliance's Andrew Rigie told The Post, since "there's only so many times you can increase the price of a burger and a bowl of pasta."
Finally, there is another AC submission which claims that the minimum wage has had an effect - but that it is only part of the story. It is important to consider the increase in rents in NY City, and that there might be a shift in the entire market.
[...] And yet, even this high level of sales wasn't enough to inoculate the business from the rising cost of rent and wages in New York. Coffee Shop co-owner and president Charlies Milite told Forbes that rent had become "unusually high," accounting for close to 27% of the restaurant's gross revenues. Add in the scheduled $2-per-hour minimum wage hike set to take place on December 31—an increase that, across Coffee Shop's 150 employees and multiple dayparts of service, would have added $46,000 to the monthly payroll—made it impossible to break even by cutting costs elsewhere.
"It's a wakeup call for our industry in general," Milite said. "When a restaurant is one of the top-ranked restaurants in America, sales-wise, and can no longer afford to operate, you have to look at that and say there's a shifting paradigm in the business."
Original Submission #1 Original Submission #2 Original Submission #3 Original Submission #4
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Saturday November 02 2019, @04:50PM (2 children)
If you've got more land than you need, why not? Depend on transients to provide your livelihood? Sounds like a fool's game.
Україна досі не є частиною Росії Слава Україні🌻 https://news.stanford.edu/2023/02/17/will-russia-ukraine-war-end
(Score: 1) by khallow on Monday November 04 2019, @03:38AM (1 child)
Or the standard rent model for the lodging and residential rental industries. Somehow they get by.
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Monday November 04 2019, @02:21PM
Key word: industries.
I believe the short analysis is: they have adequate resources to spread the risk so than when they to connect with a (minority, but far from rare) deadbeat tenant, they can absorb the loss and take it out of their paying tenants.
Individuals renting a single property that they need the income from? That is the fool's game, and for every 3 or 4 rosy stories of great tenants, best thing we ever did, the money is really great, there's one or two stories of: deadbeats trashed my house, never paid rent after the first month, took almost a year to evict them, I lost half the value of the property and have no hope of ever collecting on my legal judgement against them.
It's back to: it's good to be King - if you don't need the income, take the risk and it usually pays off. For serfs who have just what they need and not much more, attempting to act like a King is a good way to get yourself worse off than you already are.
Oh, and circling back to OP - if there's a minimum wage that's high enough for your tenants to actually pay rent and have enough left over to live, at least the ones who have a job aren't as likely to stiff you.
Україна досі не є частиною Росії Слава Україні🌻 https://news.stanford.edu/2023/02/17/will-russia-ukraine-war-end