eipstudios |
06-16-2014 06:57 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by L-Pink
(Post 20125412)
What do workers in Russian McDonald's make?
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Cashier 22,000 rubles $600 a month
3.75-4.42 a hour Traines
Employee training and opening a restaurant - salary in mcdonalds 2013 Moscow - from 153 rubles per hour, in St. Petersburg price per hour is the same on the periphery, for example, in Ekaterinburg or Samara, from 130 rubles per hour.
McDonald's did not want their thousands of workers to know that anyone can survive on Mickey D minimum wage salary. . . until they have a second job. And do not buy food. And all their expenses, so below the national average. Then they are good to go.
I think that we are exaggerating? Take a look at McDonald's "step-by-step budgeting guide for their employees, most of whom are minimum wage to flip burgers and dry gallons of special sauce from the bathroom floors. McDonald's, in partnership with Visa to create a strangely out of touch list of major costs, which tells its employees to spend $ 20 a month for health insurance (for the record, McDonald's cheapest health insurance fees employees $ 54 per month), $ 600 for rent / mortgage payments (the average monthly rent in the United States is $ 804), namely $ 0 by heat (guess employees twenty one Alaskan places are sh * t outta luck).
But wait, it gets even better. Even after sharply reducing the average monthly costs, McDonald's still could not stretch enough numbers to justify life in rock-bottom wages. Therefore, the list assumes that all McDonald's employees have a second job that pulls in $ 900 a month. And they can go without food because food forecast budget. . . nonexistent.
After taking a look at this list, we are impressed by McDonald's commitment to the minimum wage fantasyland. But we're betting their employees will be more impressed with a raise. Squeak budget manual.
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