The Borneo Post

Restaurant­s on diet after years of fattening up US Job Gains

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US RESTAURANT­S have been on a hiring binge in recent years, far out-pacing the rest of the economy. But their appetite for more employees looks to be waning.

McDonald’s and Subway, two of the largest fast-food chains in North America, have cut back on new- store openings and closed some locations.

Supermarke­ts including Kroger are pushing prepared foods, while meal kits are making it cheaper and easier for people to eat at home. Wendy’s and McDonald’s plan to install hundreds of digital ordering kiosks by year- end to boost sales as labour costs rise.

While eating out remains popular, restaurant­s face headwinds from competitio­n, over-building and automation, especially at fast-food chains. The threats loom over an industry that’s punched above its weight in America’s labor market: Since the start of the expansion in mid-2009, it has added 2.3 million jobs, or 15 per cent of the private- sector increase, while employing only nine per cent of private workers.

Now, that growth is looking more sedate. Hiring at restaurant­s and bars in 2016 was the weakest since 2010, and is running similar to that so far this year. A deeper slowdown would crimp country-wide payroll gains that have mostly beaten forecasts this year, with hurricane-impacted September data due last Friday.

“The best times for restaurant employment have passed,” said Ryan Sweet, a Moody’s Analytics economist.

While he anticipate­s demand may underpin a “fairly solid” pace of hiring the next few years, “it’s unlikely restaurant­s will be able to duplicate the kind of job gains we’ve seen since the expansion began.”

Thousands of restaurant­s, coffee shops and bars opened across the country as consumers recovering from the recession began spending more freely on eating out.

In 2015, for the first time, Americans spent more at restaurant­s than at traditiona­l grocery stores.

Industry watchers say the landscape is changing rapidly. Quick- service chains that drove growth in new locations look especially vulnerable.

NPD Group forecasts customer visits to fast-food restaurant­s will be little changed this year and next, with sales growth being driven mainly by menuprice hikes rather than higher traffic.

There’s a growing sense the industry is saturated. McDonald’s, Burger King and Wendy’s are increasing­ly battling for market share. Compared with the spring of 2016, chain restaurant­s slowed openings this year while independen­t eateries with one or two units saw an outright decline in locations, NPD data show.

Analysts are questionin­g whether Starbucks Corp. overbuilt, while rival Dunkin’ Donuts recently reduced its newstore target.

It’s all part of the toughest competitio­n ever in the US$ 1.5 trillion market for “stomach share” – an industry term for everything that Americans eat – and Amazon.com recently joined the fray.

A streak of food deflation unseen in 60 years has made grocery shopping cheaper, supermarke­ts are offering more ready-to- eat food, and Blue Apron Holdings and others are doing meal-kit deliveries.

That’s added to the pressure facing chain restaurant­s. “The pie is not really growing – it’s a matter of how much of that pie you can get,” said Michael Harms, executive director of operations at Dallas-based industry researcher TDn2K.

Then there are labour costs. Restaurant wages have grown about four per cent since mid2016, twice the pace of private earnings, amid a tight job market and minimum-wage hikes in some states.

While good for industry employees, pay gains may be behind some of the decelerati­on in hiring and thus “somewhat of a double- edged sword,” said Sweet, of Moody’s in West Chester, Pennsylvan­ia.

Fast-food chains are also diving headfirst into automation, including touch- screen devices that tend to lead to bigger orders. McDonald’s plans to have digital ordering stations at about 2,500 restaurant­s by the end of 2017. By then, Wendy’s plans to have digital kiosks at about 300 locations.

Shake Shack, the burger chain founded by restaurate­ur Danny Meyer, is opening its first location without cashiers this month in New York.

At Panera Bread, about 25 per cent of sales come through digital platforms, including its website, mobile app and kiosks. Even Domino’s Pizza is testing consumers’ appetite for driverless delivery with Ford.

While such innovation­s may eventually help restaurant­s function with fewer employees, the future hasn’t totally arrived yet. Job openings at restaurant­s and hotels climbed to a record in July, though that partly reflects high turnover, which makes it harder for chains to recruit in a tight labor market.

For now, automation is still expensive and while it may make sense at fast-food restaurant­s serving thousands of customers a day, workers who can take out the trash and clean the windows during their downtime are still a better option for many owners, according to John Gordon of Pacific Management Consulting Group in San Diego.

“I’m not sure all that versatilit­y is factored in – a robot isn’t good at going from task to task,” he said.

Among nearer-term pressures, many restaurant­s lack the pricing power to raise menu prices while labor costs are climbing and sales are cooling – they grew in August at the slowest pace since early 2014. Neil Dutta, head of US economics at Renaissanc­e Macro Research, anticipate­s the persistent headwinds “may lead to a bit more consolidat­ion” down the road.

“The next phase is, employment doesn’t grow as quickly as before,” Dutta said.

Jim Phillips, general manager of the Studio Diner in San Diego, is keeping a close eye on labour costs, especially after the city increased its minimum wage by US$ 1 to US$ 11.50 an hour in 2017.

The restaurant is down to 54 employees from about about 75 in 2009.

Phillips, 57, said he’s been hiring and scheduling fewer employees – sometimes having waiters clean tables and asking busboys to wash dishes. One move he’s considered: Getting rid of busboys altogether. Phillips has also looked into buying digital tablets that would let customers place orders, though the investment would be steep for a single restaurant relative to a chain.

“It’s a very tough situation,” he said. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? A worker passes a bag of food to a customer at the drive-thru window at a McDonald’s in White House, Tennessee, on Jan 18.
A worker passes a bag of food to a customer at the drive-thru window at a McDonald’s in White House, Tennessee, on Jan 18.
 ??  ?? An Darden Olive Garden in Louisville, Kentucky, on Sept 28, 2016.
An Darden Olive Garden in Louisville, Kentucky, on Sept 28, 2016.

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