THINK PROGRESS
Tis the season for holiday spirit: Yule logs, egg nog, festive lights
and exchanging gifts with loved ones. If you work for McDonald’s,
though, be sure to save those receipts.
McDonald’s McResource Line,
a dedicated website run by the world’s largest fast-food chain to
provide its 1.8 million employees with financial and health-related
tips, offers a full page of advice for “Digging Out From Holiday Debt.”
Among their helpful holiday tips: “Selling some of your unwanted possessions on eBay or Craigslist could bring in some quick cash.”
Elsewhere on the site, McDonald’s encourages its employees to break
apart food when they eat meals, as “breaking food into pieces often
results in eating less and still feeling full.” And if they are
struggling to stock their shelves with food in the first place, the
company offers assistance for workers applying for food stamps.
McDonald’s corporate officers have a history of offering questionable
advice to their low-wage workers. Four months ago, the company
partnered with Visa to distribute a sample “budget.” In it, the chain suggested
that workers needn’t pay for such frivolous expenses like their heating
bills, and factored in a monthly rent of $600. To workers living in New
York City (home of 350+ stores) and other expensive metropolises, that
number is almost comical.
McDonald’s employees are some of the most underpaid workers in the
country. The company’s cashiers and “team members” earn, on average,
$7.75 an hour, just 50 cents higher than the federal minimum wage.
Responding to rising living costs, many stores have staged walk-outs, strikes and protests, demanding a living wage. In Europe, where the minimum wage for employees is $12, customers pay just pennies more
than their American counterparts for the same menu items, while the
stores themselves typically bring in higher profit margins than ones in
the United States.
Of course, McDonalds has shown little willingness to negotiate higher
salaries for their poorest workers even as labor rights groups up the
pressure. Instead, their website has another piece of advice for people
who are stressed about their meager paychecks: “Quit complaining,” the
site suggests. “Stress hormones levels rise by 15% after 10 minutes of
complaining.”
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