137 points

The Big Mac set in Japan is ¥750 right now. Which converts to $5.07.

Does McDonald’s America think each restaurant is a theme park or something?

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49 points

The Big Mac set in Japan is ¥750 right now.

And Burger King is even cheaper.

It baffles my mind that people would pay $18 USD for that shit. I visited the US last year and while prices in general had definitely gone up since the last time I was there, there is absolutely no justification to pay $18 for McDonald’s. It’s crazy.

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19 points

It is insane that a meal at Red Robin with bottomless fries is actually less expensive than McDonald’s… I literally don’t go to these types of restaurants unless there is some app deal because fastfood retail prices have gone insane.

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6 points

I don’t know where they’re getting this $18 price from as my local McDonalds aren’t charging anywhere near that much for any of their meals.

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4 points

You can get some proper good food for that price in a normal restaurant here in Austria.

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4 points

I live in Texas and had a sweet potato hash with pulled pork, kale, and a poached egg for lunch yesterday for $15. If $18 for a McDonald’s meal is true, people would be crazy to go there, there are a ton of more affordable and way better options.

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3 points

Same in America. You can at least get a decent lunch that was made in a proper kitchen, with good ingredients. Maybe not dinner.

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31 points

In Australia it is $12.80 AUD for a large Big Mac meal which is $8.36 USD. For $18.5 USD I can get a much better burger and still a meal deal at either Five Guys or Grilld.

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8 points
*

Small big Mac meal is $12.80, Large is AUD$14.40, USD$9.39 pretty sure.

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2 points

Been a while since I have been now that kids are not interested in it, but that still translates to about to half the price of the US prices.

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18 points

They kind of used to be. The big old play areas are mostly gone. One in my area even had an N64 in one of those bubble kiosks. Gone. I can’t imagine why kids these days still give a shit about Micky D.

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22 points

They look like this now. Pretty much the most inoffensively hostile environment imaginable.

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21 points

Bland yet uninviting

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4 points

It looks like a McMansion kitchen/dining.

I guess that’s why “Mc” is in the term.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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2 points

I don’t necessarily blame them as workers would have to go in and hose urine out of the play structure each night.

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3 points

Nothing worth doing is easy, they say 🤣

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6 points

Yes.

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2 points

Can’t read the article without effort, but I very much doubt numbers and the context is missing. Every one I’ve been to here on the East Coast USA has been about $12.

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12 points

Which is still way too much for fucking McDonald’s.

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-11 points

Not really a big Mac will feed ya for a half day and it’s a great quick snack meal if you are on the run. I make it a point to hit them up every once in a while for breakfast too. People hate on McDonald’s way too much.

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1 point

Same in the PNW.

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2 points

I think they are/were trying to rebrand away from being a place to get cheap low quality burgers.

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Well that does not work if you only increase the price.

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2 points

Now they’re a place to get overpriced low quality burgers.

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127 points

Thank god we didnt raise minimum wage, otheriwse the price of big macs would have sky rocketed!!!

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34 points

Chipotle posted a few years back that raising the minimum wage to $15 (more than double current minimum wage) would increase the price of a burrito by about 30 cents.

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14 points

I think the idea that minimum wage hikes contributed to this is silly given that they’ve mostly eliminated cashier positions. Everything is a kiosk now. Also, McDonald’s workers in Europe make a decent wage, have sick and vacation time, and other decent benefits and the prices there are lower than in the US.

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13 points

I live in Denmark, Europe. One Bic Mac meal is 9.39 USD incl taxes.

The minimum salary in McDonals is around 3500 USD per month for a standard 37 hr/week, including pension.

This is every month, not affected by holidays, sick leave, paid vacation… It comes with 5 or 6 weeks of paid vacation per year, and virtually unlimited sick leave.

Yeah, I also don’t understand why McDonald’s says they can’t raise salaries or improve working conditions, because it will make the price go up. So why is it expensive now?

(Yes, taxes are high here. But we also have a lot of stuff that is tax paid, that evens it out somewhat.)

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9 points

Yeah, I also don’t understand why McDonald’s says they can’t raise salaries or improve working conditions, because it will make the price go up.

They say that because Americans are dumb enough to believe it and not get mad at McDonald’s for price gouging. A LOT of companies over here have been doing the same thing lately.

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1 point

This is the answer.

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81 points

Who the fuck pays $18 to eat at McDonalds?

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20 points

The only way I can justify eating at McDonald’s is by using their app to get free fries n such. Usually I can get out of there with lunch for between 5 and 10 bucks.

Even so, the value of Wendy’s Biggie Bag blows McDonald’s pricing out of the water, if I’m choosing to have fast food, I might as well have that.

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2 points

I really like a sausage muffin with cheese, but fortunately for my health, I can never make it there early enough to get breakfast.

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14 points

For real. Most of the best burgers I’ve had were cheaper than that… In Copenhagen of all expensive-ass places.

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7 points

I just ate the big Mac meal like 30 minutes ago. And in one of the most expensive states, it was $11.93 large.

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67 points

Just don’t go there anymore. If we all got on the same page and normalize boycotting corporations for the slightest reason we could hit them where it hurts; their profits. It’s the only way we can fight back against corporate greed… Use the capitalist system they have used to divide and conquer against them. Make them fear us.

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56 points
*

We’re all so fucking broken by consumerist propaganda we think adhering to the fundamental laws of capitalist economics is “boycotting” now. When prices go too high, you’re supposed to stop buying. What’s happened to people is so fucking sad. We think it’s somehow radical for consumers to adhere to the laws of supply and demand.

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23 points

[boycotting] is the only way we can fight back against corporate greed

this is a symptom of a greater problem in the united states. boycotting is never going to be as effective as legislative change because boycotts take a monumental amount of effort to organize and it’s very easy for people to lose interest/move on as time passes. the government needs to start doing something about these companies being too greedy (e.g. break them up, force price caps, nationalize them, etc)

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5 points
*

because boycotts take a monumental amount of effort to organize

It really doesn’t. If you don’t like something about a company, tell them and don’t spend your money there. It does not need to be organised. The greater issue is not that it requires monumental effort but that people are not even willing of minimal effort if it affects their every day life. “Sure Amazon is bad… But I can’t live without prime….”

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4 points

If you don’t like something about a company, tell them and don’t spend your money there.

That’s not a boycott, it’s an individual change of spending habits

It’s not a boycott if you’re alone

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2 points
*

here’s the full sentence you’re quoting:

boycotting is never going to be as effective as legislative change because boycotts take a monumental amount of effort to organize and it’s very easy for people to lose interest/move on as time passes.

sure, you can simply decide to do a one-person boycott of a company, and that wouldn’t take much effort at all to organize. but when it comes to actually changing the behavior of a company, the actions of one consumer are not going to be nearly as effective as a piece of legislation. so, you’ll probably need to get many people to band together and collectively decide to stop buying a company’s products. this leads back to the “monumental effort” part of the sentence.

also, in order for people to decide that they don’t like what a company is doing, they need to first be told that the company is doing those things. who’s going to tell them?

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1 point

Sure. But for a successful boycott you need hundreds of thousands to millions of participants over weeks to months. Can you organize that? You’re taking for granted the type of publicity campaign needed to organize a boycott like this and then you’d need to actually find enough people who care enough and have the willpower to participate. No one’s going to care if 100M people boycott a place that were already not going there. You need to convince those who regularly patronize that business.

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6 points

Gotta cook at home.

Any alternative options run $5 for 800 calories in San Francisco, besides home cooking?

Ah! Taco Bell does have ‘em beat:

Anywhere else I think you’d need [app] coupons to achieve parity, though I could be wrong.

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4 points

Omg a cheesy bean and rice burrito used to be like $1.29 or so just a few years ago.

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7 points

Used to be 99c and had pico on it. I still will eat them but they’re not the same :(

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4 points
*

I swear Domino’s pizza is the best calorie to dollar ratio here. You can get a pizza that’s probably more than your daily calorie requirement for under $5 if you buy something like a Hawaiian at lunch time.

Just checked and a deep pan pepperoni is over 1200kcal and is AUD7 (USD4.60).

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4 points

A bottle of oil is more than your daily calorie requirements and is probably cheaper.

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2 points

Ding ding ding!

Have to use one of their permanent coupons, otherwise it’s more than twice as expensive ($18.99).

Has between 2550-2640 calories as built, so:

Taco Bell: 3.38/420=0.008

Domino’s: 7.99/2600=0.0031

.8 cents per calorie versus .3 cents per calorie. What a deal! (Health evaluation not included :) )

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It’s also the absolute only thing they listen to. We’ve seen it time and time again, they’ll go back on their promises, actively harm their own customers, lie and make excuses on social media, and more for that tiny little bit of extra profit…

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67 points

As if they weren’t the ones setting the price so high. They’re actually paying attention because people are finally starting to not pay them.

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21 points
*

But the hedge fund managers sent them letters saying their job is to gouge customers explicitly looking for inexpensive meals because wE NeEd MOAAAAAAR!

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8 points
*

If they‘re already losing costumers (we‘re talking about McD costumers here. People who have been loyally buying their junk for their entire life) then it‘s already too late. People who already turned their back on a product that‘s mainly driven by brand power will not return if you just reduce prices a little again. That‘s because it took a lot more crap for them to leave than they‘re willing to come back for once they‘re gone. If McD is really openly considering to lower prices, they‘re in deep trouble.

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2 points

This kind of thing always seems to have a huge delay. Eventually enough people figure it out to make a dent, but it’s going to take 18 months to hit that point.

Oh, and every fast food place expects you to use their app, or they’ll charge you 50% more. And you have to do their dance of what to order and which deal applies this week.

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