Restaurants Get Down to Business at Nominating Conventions
“The restaurant industry is an engine of U.S. economic growth, expected to contribute $1.1T in sales to the economy – or roughly six percent of real GDP – and employ more than 15.7 million people in more than one million locations. The next few months will be pivotal to the business climate restaurant operators will be operating in for the next four years, so there is no better time to encourage support for the pro-restaurant policies essential to growth and vitality of restaurants in every community,” said Sean Kennedy, executive vice president for Public Affairs for the National Restaurant Association.
Policies and regulations topping discussions included:
The Credit Card Competition Act – The Credit Card Competition Act (CCCA) would open up the credit card processing market to competition outside of the two dominate credit card companies. Introducing competition will lower processing fees, introduce greater security and fraud prevention, and allow smaller companies to compete in the processing marketplace.
“Two credit card companies dominate swipe fee processing, pushing costs higher and higher for restaurants. In an industry with an average three-to-five percent margin, the unexpected and constant inching up of swipe fees is unmanageable,” said Kennedy. “The CCCA would empower restaurant owners to choose the most cost effective and secure network to route a credit card transaction. The impact of this would be significant – saving restaurant operators and consumers billions of dollars a year.”
Federal Trade Commission Proposed Regulation on Surcharges – The FTC proposal, Unfair or Deceptive Fees Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, seeks to eliminate all fees or surcharges, forcing restaurant operators to change menus to reflect a single “Total Price” for each item. The Commission puts the cost for doing this at more than $3.5 billion dollars for the restaurant industry, forecasting a restaurant’s menu redesign will cost almost $5,000.
“The FTC’s proposed ‘junk fees’ rule will unleash nothing but chaos and confusion for restaurant owners and diners alike,” said Kennedy. “Restaurant customers understand that they will pay extra if they are having food delivered or are dining with a large party. Fees for these services aren’t ‘junk fees’ – they add a value for the customer and reflect the higher costs that a restaurant is taking on to improve the customer’s experience.”
Support for workforce growth through increased legal immigration – The foodservice industry employs more than 10 precent of the U.S. workforce, and restaurants and accommodations have hundreds of thousands of jobs open each month. In order to fill these positions, the Association and its members support policies that increase the number of people able to join the workforce.
According to Kennedy: “The restaurant industry creates stable, career-orientated jobs every day and the people who pick these jobs are essential to the flavor and diversity that attract customers to our tables. From the immigrants bringing dishes from their cultures to the DACA recipients working their way up the management ladder, multicultural influences drive success in communities across the country. The National Restaurant Association is committed to comprehensive immigration reform and supports expanded work visa programs – like the Essential Workers for Economic Advancement – and improving legal pathways for immigration while securing safety at the border.”
Tax issues include restoring deductions for accelerated depreciation and the business interest expense standard, making the 199A deduction permanent, and the No Tax on Tips Act – The Association is focused on tax policy that will stimulate investments and improvements in restaurants of all sizes and help operators make greater investments in their workforce and communities.
“Tax policy plays a major role in the vitality of the restaurant industry. Challenging tax policy makes it more difficult to start a restaurant and to continue to improve and modernize as the business grows. Tax deductions that encourage investment and help manage capital expenditures are essential for a dynamic industry,” said Kennedy.
Tariff relief – USTR recently proposed maintaining and increasing Section 301 tariffs on China this year including on food products, kitchen and food manufacturing and preparation equipment, and plastics. Additionally, tariffs on steel and aluminum products would increase to 25%. An exclusion on ten seafood lines expired earlier this summer, extending a twenty five percent tariff on these items.
“The 301 tariffs on consumer goods and business equipment stifle restaurant growth and are ultimately harmful to U.S. businesses and consumers. We’ve pushed for relief from these tariffs for more than five years at the same time we’ve been trying to manage climbing costs for needed supplies and keep consumer prices in check,” said Kennedy.
Learn more about the industry’s policy priorities at RestaurantsAct.com.
About the National Restaurant Association
Founded in 1919, the National Restaurant Association is the leading business association for the restaurant industry, which comprises more than 1 million restaurant and foodservice outlets and a workforce of 15.5 million employees. Together with 52 State Associations, we are a network of professional organizations dedicated to serving every restaurant through advocacy, education, and food safety. We sponsor the industry's largest trade show (National Restaurant Association Show); leading food safety training and certification program (ServSafe); unique career-building high school program (the NRAEF's ProStart). For more information, visit Restaurant.org and find @WeRRestaurants on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.