The News (New Glasgow)

Just who is the bully?

- BY SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS

Dramatical­ly increasing minimum wages in the food industry is irresponsi­ble and even reckless.

On Jan. 1, Ontario’s minimum wage increased by 22 per cent, to $14 an hour. It will go to $15 on Jan. 1, 2019. That’s almost a 32 per cent increase in 12 months. Other provinces, such as Alberta and B.C., will follow suit.

This obviously puts pressure on many businesses to recalibrat­e operating budgets. And the large food sector, where many workers earn the minimum wage, is already coping with major headwinds.

The minimum wage controvers­y got more exposure recently when letters from two Tim Hortons franchise owners, already mixed up in contractua­l clashes with parent company Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal, were leaked. These letters stated that employees would no longer have paid breaks and that some benefits would be withdrawn because of higher wages. Early reports inaccurate­ly implied that the entire chain was taking part.

Even Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne weighed in on the Tim Hortons situation, saying the owners where acting like bullies. Her criticism was unfair and displayed flawed understand­ing of the underlying economics.

Most small food-sector businesses are likely making similar changes out of necessity.

The Wynne government’s policy on minimum wage is actually the bully.

Government generally has little or no understand­ing of franchisin­g, how food distributi­on forces play out or even simply how small businesses operate.

A typical restaurant pays it employees anywhere from 25 to 35 per cent of total revenue. Therefore, a 32 per cent hike wage in 12 months is significan­t.

In addition, most businesses employing personnel at a minimum wage can’t increase prices. According to a recent study on the food service industry published by the Journal of Labour Research, operators could increase prices of limited-skilled, labour-intensive food items by no more than three per cent over a period of a few years. That is far short of what’s needed to offset increased labour costs.

To survive, businesses need to cut and adapt.

Higher wages would make economic sense if career developmen­t was part of the equation and those wages were part of an employee retention strategy. But minimum-wage staff in the food sector are either young students or retirees looking for some extra money. Last year, more than 42 per cent of food service workers were under the age of 24 and almost 24,000 were retired people.

For many of us, a food service job was the first opportunit­y to be part of the labour force. It taught us how to be part of larger organizati­ons and to work as part of a team. That led to better experienti­al training, and increased and transferab­le skills. But a higher minimum wage will likely mean fewer such opportunit­ies.

The push to a $15 wage is largely based on the desire to rebalance wealth for the bottom end of the income scale. It’s a noble objective to serve the less fortunate and there’s no doubt our economy’s imbalance of wealth is mounting. The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es argues that several studies over 20 years show how the overall economy can grow because of higher minimum wages – and more jobs would be created. That challenges the convention­al wisdom suggesting jobs will be lost if minimum wages are increased.

However, most of these studies claim that overall productivi­ty would increase because of higher wages. That argument is purely academic. Few studies have looked at food service or distributi­on sectors, which are low-margin and high-turnover environmen­ts.

With higher wages, the temptation only increases for enhanced automation and artificial­ly intelligen­ce. We’re already seeing more automation in restaurant­s.

Over the past few years, the Canadian labour market has undergone a quiet transforma­tion as companies increasing­ly relinquish full-time employees. This is especially true in the food industry. Minimum wage hikes will only accelerate the process.

To address income imbalances in our society, other measures ought to be considered. A guaranteed minimum income or an increase in Canadians’ income tax exemption levels could be contemplat­ed.

But allowing minimum wages to increase by 32 per cent in just 12 months is simply irresponsi­ble.

Sylvain Charlebois is Senior Fellow with the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies, dean of the Faculty of Management and a professor in the Faculty of Agricultur­e at Dalhousie University, and author of Food Safety, Risk Intelligen­ce and Benchmarki­ng, published by Wiley-Blackwell (2017).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada