QOD
Do you think the rest of the country would know how serious this banking collapse is if instead our Fast Food Industry was the sector of the economy in trouble?
Do you think the rest of the country would know how serious this banking collapse is if instead our Fast Food Industry was the sector of the economy in trouble?
Save our Big Macs!
But they are in trouble. One of the following will not survive this Depression: Burger King, Wendy’s, Roy Rogers/Hardees.
I hope it’s Burger King. That King guy creeps me out.
What will happen to places like Denny’s or Perkins? Will some of them also go under?
Burger King and Wendy’s are big enough to survive this — Roy Rogers/Hardees mebbe not. Thing is, fast food usually benefits from people trading down in a recession. Mickey D’s is doing great.
Ah, Perkins. I enjoyed me some mighty fine dinners/breakfasts at 2:30 a.m. in college. Note to self: Do not eat pigs in a blanket after 1 a.m.
On the other hand with high unemployment, they can manage their labor costs to their advantage. Which in that business means: plenty of part-time help, no overtime costs, low turnover, low absenteeism, and no upward pressure on wages.
I wonder how so many of the bar/restaurant places can survive. There are a bunch around here — Seasons, Fridays, Ruby Tuesdays, Champps. Bennigans went under last year. I don’t know that there are enough dollars around to keep them all afloat.
To answer DV’s original question, though, yes, it would hit home with many more folks if this was a fast food crisis. Far more people stop by Arby’s every day than worry about Morgan Stanley’s credit line.
A fast food stimulus would most likely cause a run on the toilet paper sector.