By in Rhode Island’s Future
Bob Bacon, owner of Gregg's, says that raising the minimum wage will lead to restaurant workers being replaced by robots. Actually, that's starting to happen already, even without the wage hike. |
Last week’s meeting of the House Labor Committee saw five different business lobbying
groups send representatives to speak against any increase. During the two hours
of testimony, any reason that could be dredged up to oppose increasing the
minimum wage was presented – including fear mongering, the citing of
questionable studies and downright falsehoods.
Lenette Boisselle, representing the Rhode Island Hospitality Association, suggested that the minimum wage is merely a temporary training wage, and not much used in the state, even though Rep. Bennett just testified that there are 45,000 Rhode Islanders making minimum wage. Boisselle said that we don’t yet know what effects the recently enacted minimum wage increase will have on our state’s economy.
Elizabeth Suever, of the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce, agreed
with Boisselle and suggested that the state do a study to determine what the
appropriate minimum wage should be.
Bob
Bacon, who is the chairman of the
RI Hospitality Association and runs Gregg’s Restaurants, a small
chain of medium priced eateries, maintained that any increase in the minimum
wage will force prices to rise, resulting in no advantage for workers. But what
minimum wage advocates should really be worried about, according to Bacon, arerobots.
“There’s already massive movement
towards technology that will eliminate the need for labor,” said Bacon, “In
many restaurants now you have touch pads. Guess what’s next? Pretty soon you’re
placing your order on that thing and it’s going to take ten less people to
serve you your dinner.
And McDonald’s has a system now that one guy at the
end of the line starts the burger process and it spits out the other end and
they eliminated three people in the middle.”
John
Simmons, of the Rhode Island Public Expenditure Council, did Bacon
one better. “There’s been some work done, I think, by McDonald’s, as a matter
of fact. In particular, on hamburger making. There is some expertise now that
they’re drafting up that there will be no person making hamburgers anymore at
McDonald’s. It will be all done by machine.”
That workers demanding fair pay will
force industry to develop robots has been the refrain from economic
conservatives for a while now. The Wall St. Journal ran a piece called “Minimum Wage Backfire”
that blamed business automation on minimum wage activists, writing, “The result
of their agitation will be more jobs for machines and fewer for the least
skilled workers.” Conservative blogs and other media have run with the story,
but there’s no truth in it.
As Patrick Thibodeau points out in Computerworld,
“The elimination of jobs because of automation will happen anyway.” Some
experts think that robots and computers will “replace one third of all workers
by 2025.”
Bob Bacon must know this.
Gregg’s Restaurants is a pioneer in
the computerization of restaurants. Most of the millions made by Bill and Ted Fuller, owners of the small chain, has come
from POSitouch, “the food service industry’s most feature
rich POS system.” I’ve heard rumors that the entire Gregg’s Restaurant chain is
a loss leader, maintained to demonstrate the POSitouch system to interested
buyers.
If robots were able to do the work
needed to replace people in restaurants, POSitouch would be in a position to
know.
The information Bacon and Simmons presented about the hamburger machine
is probably untrue, because if the technology existed to automate the burger
making process, McDonald’s would already be using it.
Instead, McDonald’s is
investing in ordering kiosks, like ATMs in banks or the self-checkout machines
at supermarkets. And it’s doubtful that these kiosks could be prevented if the
employees agreed to work for less money.
How can any worker live on less than
it takes to maintain an iPad?
John Simmons made the additional
point that an increase in the minimum wage is basically unnecessary because, if
you are on minimum wage then “you are probably getting earned income tax credits, you’re getting Medicare, you’re getting all the social programs
which are allowing you to offset all the inflationary issues because you’re not
paying for them anymore.”
That’s true. Low wage workers are
not paying for all this government assistance. Taxpayers are. Rep Bennett
testified that Walmart has nine locations in Rhode Island and
pays $9 an hour. Their revenue is $476.3 billion. Rhode Island subsidizes
Walmart’s labor costs through social services.
Raising the minimum wage would
force Walmart to pay its own labor costs, and allow more people to live without
government assistance.
This could go a long way towards
Speaker Nicholas Mattiello’s dream of a world without a
social safety net.
Some legislators helped those
speaking against the minimum wage with their testimony by lobbing out leading
questions, as evidenced by this exchange between Republican Representative Antonio Giarusso and Bob Bacon:
“What is minimum wage?” asked
Giarusso, “Is it a living wage, is it somebody just getting out of school,
making their way, trying to learn the ropes? Not to put you on the spot, but of
all your employees, how many of them are making a minimum wage or something
really close to it and are the breadwinners in their households?”
“The breadwinners?” asked Bacon
before answering, “Zero.” Two which Giarrusso said with satisfaction, “I
thought that would be the answer.”
Penelope
Kyritsis, representing RI National Organization for Women, said that
approximately 60% of minimum wage workers are women, based on a report from the
National Women’s Law Center. Most of these women
have children and no spouse to rely on, meaning that they are the main
breadwinners in their family.
A typical minimum wage worker,
according to Kyritsis, contrary to popular belief, is not a teenager. The
average age of a minimum wage worker is 35, according to the United States Department of Labor, and 88% are at
least 20 years old.
A full report on the benefits
of raising the minimum wage in Rhode Island to $10.10 can be found here.
It should be noted that a single person with no children needs to make $11.86 an hour, to not be in
poverty.
If there are any doubts about the
cozy relationship between our General Assembly and the business interests in Rhode
Island, there’s this exchange I’ve reproduced in comics form.
Right now, business owners and
lobbyists have the reigns of the State House. They are pursuing an economic
agenda that has only benefited those at the top and almost never those who
struggle at the margins.
If low wage workers want fair
treatment at the State House, they have to organize and demand it.
Steve Ahlquist is a writer, artist and current president of the
Humanists of Rhode Island, a non-profit group dedicated to reason, compassion,
optimism, courage and action. The views expressed are his own and not
necessarily those of any organization of which he is a member.
His photos and video are usable
under the Creative Commons license. Free to share with credit.
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"We must take sides. Neutrality
helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never
the tormented.” - Elie Weisel