The Jerusalem Post

In Russia, McDonald’s ‘golden arches’ have a Russian shine

- • By MARIA KISELYOVA and OLGA SICHKAR

MOSCOW (Reuters) – When McDonald’s opened its first Russian restaurant in 1990 in Moscow, it was not unusual to see wedding receptions held there, so strong was the appeal of the quintessen­tial American brand at the end of the Cold War.

In recent years, with US-Russia ties increasing­ly frosty, the fast-food chain has pursued a different strategy: go native.

“We say it every time: We are a Russian company,” Khamzat Khasbulato­v, the head of McDonald’s Russia, told Reuters. “I don’t think there’s a single company that can call itself more Russian than us.”

Nearly all the restaurant’s suppliers are Russian, and its executives are all Russian, he said in an interview. The familiar McDonald’s logo outside the restaurant­s is all in Russia’s Cyrillic script.

As for the golden arches, Khasbulato­v said: “They are Russian arches. They shine wherever they are.”

The company has reason to play down its US associatio­ns.

After Washington imposed sanctions on Russia over its role in Ukraine in 2014, Russia’s public health watchdog briefly closed down dozens of McDonald’s outlets, including its original Moscow flagship in Pushkin Square, citing hygiene concerns.

Some Russian politician­s called for the chain to be shut down completely.

Khasbulato­v acknowledg­ed the link with the United States was sensitive.

“We don’t want to be drawn in when something’s going on,” he said.

A wholly owned unit of the firm headquarte­red in Oak Brook, Illinois, McDonald’s Russia has 609 restaurant­s around the country and plans to add at least 50 more in 2017 after expanding last year to the far-flung Urals and Siberia.

McDonald’s does not disclose its Russian unit’s profit numbers but counted it among high-growth markets in its 2015 annual report, with high expansion and franchisin­g potential. Its Pushkin Square branch is one of the busiest in the world.

Khasbulato­v said he hopes to increase the share of franchised branches, which currently account for only 15% of outlets in Russia compared to the global McDonald’s norm of 80%.

Khasbulato­v declined to comment on what the future holds for McDonald’s Russia now that Donald Trump is US president. Russian President Vladimir Putin has spoken about Trump in warm terms, and Trump has said he wants the relationsh­ip to improve.

McDonald’s has to be pragmatic, said Bob Goldin, a partner at Pentallect, a Chicago, Illinois-based food-industry consulting firm.

“My sense is they have to play a real balancing act,” he said in an email.

For customers, however, politics did not seem to be that big a deal.

“It’s irrelevant,” Vadim Ashiman, 22, told a Reuters reporter at one branch near the Kremlin in Moscow. “It’s food. Food isn’t to blame for political difference­s.”

 ?? (Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters) ?? AN EMPLOYEE carries a tray of Big Mac burgers at a McDonald’s restaurant in Moscow last week.
(Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters) AN EMPLOYEE carries a tray of Big Mac burgers at a McDonald’s restaurant in Moscow last week.

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