![]() So how exactly do McDonald's and other chains manage to turn a profit abroad while paying an hourly wage their American workers can only fantasize about while picketing? Part of the answer, as you might expect, boils down to higher prices. France, with its roughly $12.00 hourly minimum, has more than 1,200 locations. The company actually earns more revenue out of Europe than than it does from the United States. The land down under is, of course, not the only high-wage country in the world where McDonald's does lucrative business. On July 24, the country's Fair Work Commission approved a new labor agreement between the company and its employees guaranteeing them up to a 15 percent pay increase by 2017.Īnd here's the kicker: Many Australian McDonald's workers were already making more than the minimum to begin with. So there's a certain irony that in Australia, where the minimum wage for full-time adult workers already comes out to about $14.50 an hour, McDonald's staffers were busy scoring an actual raise. In doing so, they added another symbolic chapter to an eight-month-old campaign of one-day strikes that, so far, has yielded lots of news coverage, but not much in terms of tangible results. ![]() ![]() Last week, fast-food workers around the United States yet again walked off the job to protest their low pay and demand a wage hike to $15 an hour, about double what many of them earn today.
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