The North Carolina General Assembly is in the midst of its “long session”. One lawmaker caught my attention when she filed a bill to increase the minimum wage in the state to $15 per hour. Representative Pricey Harrison, a Greensboro Democrat, submitted the Economic Security Act of 2017 – a bill that would allow collective bargaining for state employees, raise the minimum wage, require employers to pay sick and family leave.
Keep in mind, this bill was filed at the tail end of a major announcement from Wendy’s, they are adding 1,000 self-ordering kiosks to stores by year end. Undoubtedly these kiosks are designed to replace counter employees with emerging robots and other autonomous technologies. Wendy’s, Taco Bell and other major fast food chains are now advancing plans to integrate new technology as more political pressure builds for a $15 “living wage”, healthcare expenses continue rising uncontrollably and out of control government regulations add onerous costs for private companies.
Additionally, the Bureau of Labor Statistics just released the February jobs report, 235,000 non-farm jobs beat expectations, but hidden in the figure is troubling news for retailers. The sector loss 26,000 jobs in February as it battles online retailers not encumbered by brick-and-mortar overhead; not surprising after major retailers announced massive store closings.
Elected officials who introduce legislation adding more costs to an industry under such pressure is clearly disconnected from current market reality.
America is a story of innovation, creativity and disruptive technologies – we adapt with each passing generation. But sometimes government and industry resist change, clinging to passing ideals, not realizing the only way forward is through embracing the very change they fear most.
Likewise, GOP lawmakers appear to be struggling with reality, they fail to understand companies are no longer simply companies. They are brands, fully equipped with a conscious and social priorities at the center. I personally struggle with the speed that our society is moving in regards to what may be socially acceptable and what little remains taboo. But true leaders understand their views, beliefs and ideology is not easily transferred to the minds of everyone, as if we live collectively as the “Borg” upon a flying space ship – assimilating everyone in our path.
Any state lawmaker towing the party line and declaring HB2 is not adversely impacting North Carolina’s economy is not fully connected to reality. Can we survive with the law in place? Yes. But there is no doubt that companies, trade associations and national events are bypassing the state while we debate and figure out what we are doing.
Despite the campaign advertisements and charismatic politicians, government does not create jobs – risk hungry entrepreneurs, hard working employees and willing investors create jobs. And they do a pretty darn good job at it when opposing forces stay out the way. In the end, government affects the playing field, often swinging outcomes one way or the other based on political priorities. We should all hope elected officials discover ways to be more in tune with market realities when advancing their political ideas.