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February 04, 2015

San Francisco Just Raised the Minimum Wage to $15 an Hour; Now THIS Is Happening

 San Francisco bookstore Borderlands Books has announced that they will be closing in March, after 18 years in business, despite having their “best year” in 2014 because of San Francisco’s upcoming minimum wage hike.
The Daily Signal reports:
Last year, San Francisco voters approved raising the city’s minimum wage to $15 dollars an hour by 2018, a wage Borderlands can’t afford to pay.
“Although all of us at Borderlands support the concept of a living wage in [principle] and we believe that it’s possible that the new law will be good for San Francisco — Borderlands Books as it exists is not a financially viable business if subject to that minimum wage. Consequently we will be closing our doors no later than March 31,” reads the statement.

Borderlands Books owner Alan Beatts doesn’t see a reason to delay the inevitable.
Beatts writes that a $15 wage would result in a 39 percent increase in wages – an expense he would have to make up elsewhere.
But he can’t. Unlike other business which can raise the prices of their goods and services in the face of a higher wage, bookstores have to grapple with the fact that books have a fixed price.
This bookstore is just one of thousands of small business expected to close once San Francisco’s minimum wage increase fully goes into effect. It’s not like there wasn’t warning that this would happen:
 Minimum wage laws never work. Part of the reason is business will make changes to adapt to the higher labor costs after a minimum wage increase.
More specifically, minimum wage laws encourage employers to cut back on fringe benefits and install labor-saving devices. For an example see this new labor-saving device from McDonalds:
 So, at first McDonalds, and other fast food restaurants, will replace cashiers with ordering kiosks, then they’ll replace most of the cooks with something like this:
With humans needing to take breaks, have at least 4 weekend days off per month, and demanding ever-increasing minimum-wage for a job that was never meant to provide a ‘living-wage’, Momentum Machines – a San Francisco-based robotics company has unveiled the ‘Smart Restaurants’ machine which is capable of making ~360 ‘customized’ gourmet burgers per hour without the aid of a human.

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