From Roosevelt Institute <[email protected]>
Subject Roosevelt Rundown: Fast-Food Companies Can Easily Afford California’s New Minimum Wage
Date March 29, 2024 3:14 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Large corporate markups and profit margins leave more than enough room for the new $20-per-hour wage.

The Roosevelt Rundown features our top stories of the week.
View this in your browser and share with your friends. ([link removed])
[link removed]


** Fast-Food Firms Can Handle a Minimum Wage Increase
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]
Fast-food companies in California, such as Burger King, will have to comply with a $20-per-hour minimum wage beginning April 1. (Photo by Mario Tama / Getty Images)
Starting April 1, fast-food workers in California will be paid at least $20 an hour, thanks to legislation passed last fall that raised the industry-wide minimum wage.

Companies shouldn’t have a problem absorbing those costs. As Alí R. Bustamante and Ira Regmi find in a new Roosevelt Institute analysis ([link removed]) , profit margins and markups—the difference between the prices consumers pay and the cost of production—have increased sharply over the past decade of growth for the industry.

“Most affected employers could cover the expense of the minimum wage increase by merely decreasing their share repurchases,” the authors write. In 2023 alone, the 10 largest publicly traded fast-food companies spent $6.1 billion on stock buybacks. According to the authors’ calculations, the cost of the minimum wage increase for affected employers would be an increase of a maximum of just $4.6 billion annually—and that’s an overestimate.

“Markups have only benefited wealthy stock owners and hedge funds,” Bustamante and Regmi write. “In sharp contrast, minimum wage increases have the potential to shift corporate profits inward, back into the company, rewarding the workers who drive productivity in the first place.”

Read more in “Fast-Food Industry Profiteering: Why California Businesses Can Absorb a Higher Minimum Wage.” ([link removed])


** Learning from Industrial Policy Successes and Failures
------------------------------------------------------------
What’s next for the US industrial policy agenda? This week, the Roosevelt Institute convened a panel of experts ([link removed]) to discuss economic development strategies the US can use to achieve a zero-emissions economy.

Roosevelt Senior Fellow Saule Omarova discussed the history of national development banks ([link removed]) , Jonas Algers spoke about how public institutions are facilitating Sweden’s green steel transition ([link removed]) , and Roosevelt Deputy Director Isabel Estevez explained the challenges of decarbonizing the US steel industry ([link removed]) , outlined in a working paper released last week.

“What we’ve seen over the course of the last few years,” said Roosevelt’s Todd N. Tucker, who moderated the event, “is a real turn toward making conscious and democratic decisions [about] which sectors need to survive and thrive in order to promote resilience for the national economy over the longer term.”
Watch the webinar ([link removed])


** What We're Talking About
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]
Read the article ([link removed])


** What We're Reading
------------------------------------------------------------
Biden’s Big Bet on Aluminum ([link removed]) — feat. Roosevelt’s Todd N. Tucker — Heatmap News

Connecticut Poised to Ban Legacy Admissions in All Colleges ([link removed]) — feat. Roosevelt’s Alí R. Bustamante — University World News

UAW, Volkswagen Agree to Unionization Vote at Tennessee Plant ([link removed]) — Axios

Why We're Fighting for Labor Unions to Have a Voice in Implementing AI ([link removed]) — Fast Company

============================================================


Join the Conversation

** Twitter ([link removed])
** Facebook ([link removed])
** LinkedIn ([link removed])
** YouTube ([link removed])
** Update your preferences ([link removed])
. Tell us which emails you want to receive!

If you are interested in supporting the Roosevelt Institute, ** click here ([link removed])
.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Institute, all rights reserved.

570 Lexington Ave, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10022

rooseveltinstitute.org

If you would like to unsubscribe from this list, ** click here ([link removed])
.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis