Bankruptcy | InsideOjodu https://www.insideojodu.com ...conecting the community Wed, 17 Jul 2019 22:05:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.9.10 http://www.insideojodu.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/favicon.ico Bankruptcy | InsideOjodu https://www.insideojodu.com 32 32 Seattle Restaurant chain blames minimum wage for bankruptcy https://www.insideojodu.com/seattle-restaurant-chain-blames-minimum-wage-for-bankruptcy/ https://www.insideojodu.com/seattle-restaurant-chain-blames-minimum-wage-for-bankruptcy/#respond Wed, 17 Jul 2019 22:05:55 +0000 https://www.insideojodu.com/?p=5874 A lot of Businesses fail all the time for all kinds of reasons. However,…

The post Seattle Restaurant chain blames minimum wage for bankruptcy first appeared on InsideOjodu.]]>
A lot of Businesses fail all the time for all kinds of reasons. However, when Restaurants Unlimited filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last week, people noticed. The company owns 35 upscale restaurants located primarily on the West Coast, including seven in Seattle.

In its filing, it declared, “Over the last three years, the company’s profitability has been significantly impacted by progressive wage laws along the Pacific coast…the result was to increase the company’s annual wage expenses by an aggregate of $10.6 million.”

It went on to state three examples where minimum wages have risen dramatically over the last three years. Portland now requires $12.50 an hour, an increase of 35 percent. San Francisco’s minimum wage has climbed 41 percent to $15.59 per hour. And Seattle, the first city with a $15 minimum wage, now forces large employers to pay at least $16 an hour.

Restaurants Unlimited, which is currently settled in Seattle, did raise menu prices and even added a living wage surcharge to bills. But it still lost money.

“I think what Restaurants Unlimited found out is that they can’t pass along the full impact of that labor cost increase to customers through their prices, said Michael Saltsman of the Employment Policies Institute. “People can stay home, people can eat out less often.”

Ethan Stowell is a successful restaurateur, having 14 high-end restaurants in Seattle. He supports the city’s minimum wage law, but admits that it has forced him trim staff to be more efficient.

“I think it’s just the cost of doing business has gone up, and it’s really hard to adjust your prices at a restaurant at the speed the market changes,” Stowell said.

Despite the high minimum wage in Seattle, 111 new restaurants have opened in the city since May. The unemployment rate is at 3.4 percent, slightly less than the 3.7 percent U.S. jobless rate. Proponents of a higher minimum wage say Restaurants Unlimited is making worker’s pay a convenient scapegoat.

“They made some bad business decisions,” said former Washington State Rep. Jessyn Farrell of Civic Ventures. “There were a couple openings that didn’t go well, and I think what’s really telling is they aren’t closing restaurants in Seattle.”

Just before filing for bankruptcy, Restaurants Unlimited did close six of its unprofitable locations. None are among the seven restaurants it runs in Seattle and one is in Indiana, where the minimum wage is set at the federal rate of $7.25.

The post Seattle Restaurant chain blames minimum wage for bankruptcy first appeared on InsideOjodu.]]>
https://www.insideojodu.com/seattle-restaurant-chain-blames-minimum-wage-for-bankruptcy/feed/ 0
Nigeria is heading into bankruptcy – Emir Sanusi https://www.insideojodu.com/nigeria-is-heading-into-bankruptcy-emir-sanusi/ https://www.insideojodu.com/nigeria-is-heading-into-bankruptcy-emir-sanusi/#respond Wed, 26 Jun 2019 09:26:15 +0000 https://www.insideojodu.com/?p=5299 The former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria and the Emir of Kano,…

The post Nigeria is heading into bankruptcy – Emir Sanusi first appeared on InsideOjodu.]]>
The former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria and the Emir of Kano, Mallam Muhammad Sanusi II, has said that Nigeria is on the verge of bankruptcy as fuel and electricity subsidies, as well as debt servicing, continue to eat into government revenue .

Emir Sanusi said this while delivering his address at the ongoing third National Treasury Workshop, organised by the office of the Accountant General of the Federation in Kano .

He said, “In 2011 when I was CBN governor, Nigeria made $16bn from petroleum sales, and we spent $ 8bn importing petroleum and spent another $8.2bn subsidising the product…and I asked , ‘Is this sustainable? The country is bankrupt and we are heading to bankruptcy. What happens is that the Federal Government do pay petroleum subsidy, pays electricity tariff subsidy, and if there is a rise in interest rates, the Federal Government pays. What is more life – threatening than the subsidy that we have to sacrifice education, health sector and infrastructure for us to have cheap petroleum? If truly President Buhari is fighting poverty, he should remove the risk on the national financial sector and stop the subsidy regime , which is fraudulent.”

The post Nigeria is heading into bankruptcy – Emir Sanusi first appeared on InsideOjodu.]]>
https://www.insideojodu.com/nigeria-is-heading-into-bankruptcy-emir-sanusi/feed/ 0