- An estimated 23% of
McDonald's workers make under $10 an hour, a new study found. - This is a higher percentage of workers than at competing fast-food chains.
McDonald's workers have some of the lowest
The Wage Tracker project from EPI found that 23% of McDonald's workers make less than $10 per hour, based on survey results collected in March and November 2021. The left-leaning, pro-union think tank says that it surveyed over 20,000 workers at 66 chains across the US, with an average of 317 respondents per chain.
A wage of $10 per hour works out to a salary of $20,000 a year for someone working typical 40-hour workweeks.
The number of workers making under $10 an hour was higher at McDonald's than at any of its competitors studied by EPI. In comparison, 14% of Taco Bell workers, 17% of Burger King workers, and 11% of Chick-fil-A workers make less than $10. McDonald's also employs more workers than these competitors, with nearly 700,000 US workers as of 2019.
McDonald's told Insider in a statement that it disputes the results. It says the survey "relies on a small sample size and dated information." McDonald's also increased wages by an average of 10% in May 2021 with plans to increase the average hourly wage to $15 by 2024, the chain said. These changes only applied to about 5% of US McDonald's workers. McDonald's says many franchisees, who employ the rest of the chain's workers, have raised wages over the last year and added PTO, education, and tuituon benefits.
"We will continue to focus on what's most important to our people – pay and benefits, training and growth opportunities, and recognition and appreciation – to attract and retain talent in this competitive hiring environment," McDonald's told Insider in a statement.
Fast-food workers have had more leverage in the past year as businesses struggled to retain and hire employees, and many workers saw this as a chance to demand higher wages and better benefits. Over the last year, restaurants couldn't keep locations staffed at pre-pandemic levels, so they have to compete for workers with sign-on bonuses and other perks. The labor shortage in many sectors of the
Workers received some concessions, like
These wages on the lower end of fast-food workers also result in less purchasing power thanks to rapid inflation, which hit a 41-year high in March.
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