By Annie Gasparro And Eric Morath
McDonald's Corp. plans to raise pay by more than 10% and add
benefits like paid vacation for workers at U.S. restaurants it
operates, an effort to rejuvenate the struggling fast-food giant
that offers fresh evidence of rising wage pressure in the American
labor market.
Starting July 1, McDonald's will pay at least $1 per hour more
than the local legal minimum wage for employees at the roughly
1,500 restaurants it owns in the U.S. The increase, which
McDonald's said will apply to some 90,000 workers at all levels of
experience and rank, will lift the average hourly rate for its U.S.
restaurant employees to $9.90 on July 1 and more than $10 by the
end of 2016, from $9.01 currently. McDonald's also will enable
workers after a year of employment to accrue up to five days of
paid time-off annually.
The changes come amid mounting criticism from labor groups over
wages and conditions at McDonald's and other fast-food chains. The
move doesn't apply to employees of the franchisees who operate
nearly 90% of the 14,350 U.S. McDonald's--a fact critics may seize
on. McDonald's says franchisees are free to set their own pay
policies. The company said it does plan to make subsidies for some
education costs available to all U.S. workers as part of its
plan.
McDonald's Chief Executive Steve Easterbrook, who took over on
March 1, said the policy is a response to employee surveys and is
central to his plans to revive sales after more than two years of
declines. "What we need to underpin that is highly motivated teams
in our restaurants," he said in an interview. "Motivated teams
deliver better customer service and delivering better customer
service in our restaurants is clearly going to be a vital part of
our turnaround."
The move follows similar efforts by other major U.S. employers
including Wal-Mart Stores Inc., which is raising hourly pay for
500,000 workers to at least $10 next year, and reflects wider
public pressures over income inequality as well as intensifying
competition for low-skilled workers.
From a year earlier, average hourly earnings for non-manager
employees at limited-service restaurants like McDonald's rose 3.5%
in January to $9.54 an hour, according to Labor Department data,
well above 2.2% pace for all private-sector workers.
Historically, stronger pay increases are somewhat unusual at
this stage in the business cycle for lower-skilled workers, who
typically are the last to see better wage gains. The increases
could reflect some payback after several years of wages barely
keeping pace with inflation, or could indicate that skilled-workers
who resorted to restaurant jobs in the economic downturn are now
seeking better paying work.
Better pay among lower-skilled workers has the potential to
"bubble up" through the economy, said Patrick O'Keefe, an economist
at CohnReznick LLP. Raising starting wage will likely boost wages
of others within a given company. Also, more money in workers'
pockets should provide a boost to consumer spending and aid overall
economic expansion.
"The underlying motivation is a response to market conditions,"
said Mr. O'Keefe, a former Labor Department official. "The firms
that have announced very publicly that they're raising their entry
wage are signaling that to attract the quality of labor they're
looking for, they have to be more competitive."
The federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour hasn't increased since
2009, although 29 states have set minimums above the federal level,
as have cities such as San Francisco, which requires pay of at
least $11.05 an hour. Efforts in Congress to increase the pay floor
stalled last year. But more large employers raising wages could set
a "de facto" minimum wage that is higher than the federal floor,
said University of Michigan economist Donald Grimes.
McDonald's announcement is unlikely to satisfy its strongest
critics, who have been calling for much larger increases and
demanding the company take responsibility for pay and other
policies at its franchisees. Fast Food Forward, a group backed by
the Service Employees International Union, has helped organize
nationwide protests at McDonald's and other chains demanding a $15
hourly minimum and the right to form a union without employer
backlash. The next round of protests is scheduled for April 15,
according to organizers. McDonald's said the protests weren't a
factor in its decision.
The move could put pressure for similar increases on McDonald's
franchisees, powerful stakeholders that the company carefully
manages its relationships with. McDonald's sets many requirements
in agreements with its franchisees but doesn't govern their wages
and benefits, and it is currently fighting complaints by the
National Labor Relations Board's general counsel last year that
claim McDonald's has sufficient control over its franchisees'
operations to make it a joint employer responsible for the rights
of franchisees' workers.
Mr. Easterbrook said the franchisees are "experts...at setting
the right pay levels in their local markets." Asked if McDonald's
would consider requiring them to enhance pay or benefits in future
contracts, he said "absolutely not."
Write to Annie Gasparro at annie.gasparro@wsj.com and Eric
Morath at eric.morath@wsj.com
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