The Expert Podcast

Episode Description 
Explore the unintended consequences of labor movements as automation accelerates in response to rising wages. From McDonald's drink carousels to robot-operated french fry stations, discover how businesses are systematically replacing human workers with machines to offset increasing labor costs. This episode examines the real-world examples of automation happening right now and what it means for the future of work. 

Key Topics Covered
 
  • The McDonald's Drink Carousel Revolution - How a simple automated drink dispenser represents a fundamental shift in fast-food labor
  • Robot French Fry Cooks - Reuters reports on robotic arms that cook fries faster, with less waste and fewer errors than human workers
  • The Labor Cost Pressure Cooker - Why rising minimum wages and benefits are accelerating automation adoption across industries
  • Slice-by-Slice Job Elimination - How automation doesn't replace entire jobs at once, but removes specific tasks and responsibilities
  • The Economics of Automation - Understanding why businesses choose robots over humans when labor costs increase
  • Customer Price Sensitivity - How consumer demand for low prices drives businesses toward automated solutions
  • The Inflation Connection - Examining how labor costs contribute to inflation and how automation serves as a business response
  • Industry-Wide Implications - What food service automation means for hospitality, programming, and other sectors
  • The Domino Effect - How 10% automation can lead to 10% fewer employees and reduced staffing needs
  • Unintended Consequences - The paradox of labor movements potentially accelerating job displacement
Episode Highlights
  • Real-world observation of automation in action during the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Three-year timeline from drink dispensers to full robotic cooking systems
  • The business case for automation: offsetting rising labor costs without raising consumer prices
  • How companies balance cost pressures with customer price expectations
  • The systematic approach to automating human tasks across multiple industries
Discussion Questions
  • What are your thoughts on the acceleration of automation in response to wage increases?
  • How do you feel about the development of robots replacing human interactions?
  • What other industries do you see following this automation trend?
  • How should society balance fair wages with technological advancement?
Resources & References
  • Reuters article on robotic french fry cooking technology
  • COVID-19 pandemic impact on automation adoption
  • Fast-food industry automation trends
  • Labor cost and inflation correlation studies
Share your thoughts on automation and its impact on the workforce in the comments below. What examples of job automation have you noticed in your daily life?

What is The Expert Podcast?

The Expert Podcast brings you firsthand narratives from experts across diverse industries, including private investigators, general contractors and builders, insurance agencies, vehicle specialists, lawyers, and many others.

Here's another one of those unintended consequences of Labor movements that somehow in some cases might actually have backlash a couple years ago I was driving and needed um quick drive through to get something to drink and normally wouldn't go through a fast food drive-through however this was during covid pandemic where there was lockdowns and you really couldn't walk into a lot of places nor did I want to so there was a McDonald's that was you know going right by where I was driving.
And I pulled through the drive-through to get a bottle of water and I noticed that when I went to the drive-through window to collect the water that I had paid for there was a little Carousel that had all the drinks in it so when orders came through the window and somebody ordered you know a Big Mac with a Coke or happy meal with a Sprite or whatever it was the little Carousel automatically took a cup it went through the carousel it filled it with ice put the drink in it and then it put it where the the person who was handing out the food could just grab it and hand it out the window.
And granted the people at the McDonald's still have to make the food and hand take the money and hand it out but it took one step of the process away from somebody having to fill the drinks right and I was thinking well gee they're taking slices of the labor out of the process they're taking slices of the paid cost out of employees job responsibilities and I was wondering how big of a deal that was well here we are three years later that was in 2019.
And here's an article from Reuters where robots are actually now doing french fries better than humans faster less waste less errors and there's a robot that has an arm that puts the basket in fries you know waits for the fry to happen pull it out and then dump it into the buckets well this may not seem like a big deal but little by little as different Industries food service hospitality programming find ways to take slices of Labor away from humans and automating it it's going to need Less hours for employees in the environment.
For example employees may only be 10 percent of the hours of cooking the fries but now that you have that done automatically you can have 10 percent less employees in that store maybe now they work on something else or you don't need that extra staff for that shift part of the reason is because the labor costs have gone up with higher minimum wages more benefits and you know it's one thing to actually just pay them while you have to but it does put the pressure on companies to accelerate adoption of these Technologies to reduce their costs.
Because look they're not going to be able to if the labor rates go up take french fries and take it from two dollars to ten dollars certainly we have inflation and part of inflation is from this labor cost part of it's from supply chain and other things but anything that a business can do to help offset some of that through automation then that's what's going to happen because the comp the customers who are buying the products are demanding the least amount of price that they can right they don't want to pay ten dollars for a bag of fries.
So these automated processes whether you like them or not whether you think they're good or bad for society this is what happens when one cost goes up you try to offset it somewhere else so you don't end up being out of business because you're not making any money uh but it was just interesting to see that now they're cooking the fries with a robot as opposed to having labor do that.
Tell us what your thoughts are in the comments or what you think about this development of automation of previously human interactions.