Denmark’s McDonald’s Workers Aren’t Demanding $15 an Hour—Because They’re Already Making $20
X post in Labor and Socialist-Progressive
At full time hours, Danish workers would make over $40,000 a year. (Mike Mozart/Flickr)
BY JANET ALLON, ALTERNET
Imagine a world where fast food workers can pay their rent and utility bills, plus buy their children food and clothes. Well, you don't have to imagine it because such a place exists. It's called Denmark.
A New York Times article on Tuesday chronicled the life of a Danish fast food worker named Hampus Elofsson, who works 40 hours a week at a Burger King in Copenhagen, and makes enough not only to pay his bills, but to save some money and enjoy a night out with friends. His wage: $20 per hour. Yep, you read that right. The base wage in Denmark is close to two and a half times what American fast food workers make.
Elofsson's pay is the kind of wage that Anthony Moore, a shift manager in Tampa, Florida, can only dream about. He earns $9 an hour for his low-level management job, or about $300 per week, and like half of America's fast food workers, he relies on some form of public assistance to make up the difference between that wage and barely eking out a living.
Its very inadequate, Moore, a single father of two young daughters, told the Times. He gets $164 in food stamps for his daughters. Sometimes I ask, Do I buy food or do I buy them clothes? ... If I made $20 an hour, I could actually live, instead of dreaming about living.
FULL story at link.