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词条 McDonald's
释义

  1. History

  2. Corporate overview

     Facts and figures   Finance   Business model  Headquarters  Board of directors  Global operations 

  3. Products

     International menu variations 

  4. Restaurants

     Types of restaurants  McDrive  McCafé  "Create Your Taste" restaurants  Other  Special diet  Playgrounds  McDonald's Next  2006 redesign  Smoking ban 

  5. Treatment of employees

     Automation  Wages  Strikes  Working conditions 

  6. Animal welfare standards

  7. Marketing and advertising

     Space exploration  Children's advertising  Sports awards and honors 

  8. Charity

     McHappy Day  McDonald's Monopoly donation  McRefugee 

  9. Criticism

     Company responses to criticism  Environmental record  Legal cases   European Union   Malaysia  Australia  United Kingdom  United States  Use of genetically modified food 

  10. See also

  11. References

  12. Further reading

  13. External links

{{other uses|Macdonald (disambiguation)}}{{redirect|McD||MCD (disambiguation)}}{{redirect|McDo|the Philippine fast-food chain that is known locally as this name|McDonald's Philippines}}{{pp-semi-indef|small=yes}}{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2019}}{{Use American English|date=August 2016}}{{Infobox McDonald's
|logo = McDonald's Golden Arches.svg
|size = 120px
|text =
|alt = Two yellow arches joined together to form a rounded letter M.
}}McDonald's is an American fast food company, founded in 1940 as a restaurant operated by Richard and Maurice McDonald, in San Bernardino, California, United States. They rechristened their business as a hamburger stand, and later turned the company into a franchise, with the Golden Arches logo being introduced in 1953 at a location in Phoenix, Arizona. In 1955, Ray Kroc, a businessman, joined the company as a franchise agent and proceeded to purchase the chain from the McDonald brothers. McDonald's had its original headquarters in Oak Brook, Illinois, but moved its global headquarters to Chicago in early 2018.[1][2][3]

McDonald's is the world's largest restaurant chain by revenue,[4] serving over 69 million customers daily in over 100 countries[5] across 37,855 outlets as of 2018.[6][7] Although McDonald's is best known for its hamburgers, cheeseburgers and french fries, they also feature chicken products, breakfast items, soft drinks, milkshakes, wraps, and desserts. In response to changing consumer tastes and a negative backlash because of the unhealthiness of their food,[8] the company has added to its menu salads, fish, smoothies, and fruit. The McDonald's Corporation revenues come from the rent, royalties, and fees paid by the franchisees, as well as sales in company-operated restaurants. According to two reports published in 2018, McDonald's is the world's forth-largest private employer with 1.7 million employees (behind Walmart with 2.3 million employees).[9][10]

History

{{Main|History of McDonald's}}{{multiple image
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The siblings Richard and Maurice McDonald opened in 1940 the first McDonald's at 1398 North E Street at West 14th Street in San Bernardino, California (at {{coord|34.1255|-117.2946|display=inline}}) but it was not the McDonald's recognizable today; Ray Kroc made changes to the brothers' business to modernize it. The brothers introduced the "Speedee Service System" in 1948, putting into expanded use the principles of the modern fast-food restaurant that their predecessor White Castle had put into practice more than two decades earlier.{{citation needed|date=May 2016}} The original mascot of McDonald's was a chef hat on top of a hamburger who was referred to as "Speedee". In 1962, the Golden Arches replaced Speedee as the universal mascot. The symbol, Ronald McDonald, was introduced in 1965. The clown, Ronald McDonald, appeared in advertising to target their audience of children.[11]

On May 4, 1961, McDonald's first filed for a U.S. trademark on the name "McDonald's" with the description "Drive-In Restaurant Services", which continues to be renewed. By September 13, McDonald's, under the guidance of Ray Kroc, filed for a trademark on a new logo—an overlapping, double-arched "M" symbol. But before the double arches, McDonald's used a single arch for the architecture of their buildings. Although the "Golden Arches" logo appeared in various forms, the present version was not used until November 18, 1968, when the company was favored a U.S. trademark.

The present corporation credits its founding to franchised businessman Ray Kroc in on April 15, 1955. This was in fact the ninth opened McDonald's restaurant overall, although this location was destroyed and rebuilt in 1984. Kroc later purchased the McDonald brothers' equity in the company and begun the company's worldwide reach. Kroc was recorded as being an aggressive business partner, driving the McDonald brothers out of the industry.

Kroc and the McDonald brothers fought for control of the business, as documented in Kroc's autobiography. The San Bernardino restaurant was eventually torn down (1971, according to Juan Pollo) and the site was sold to the Juan Pollo chain in 1976. This area now serves as headquarters for the Juan Pollo chain, and a McDonald's and Route 66 museum.[12] With the expansion of McDonald's into many international markets, the company has become a symbol of globalization and the spread of the American way of life. Its prominence has also made it a frequent topic of public debates about obesity, corporate ethics, and consumer responsibility.

Corporate overview

Facts and figures

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| caption3 = Corporate logo used from 2003 to 2006
}}

McDonald's restaurants are found in 120 countries and territories around the world and serve 68 million customers each day.[13][14] McDonald's operates 37,855 restaurants worldwide, employing more than 210,000 people as of the end of 2018.[6][7][13] There are currently a total of 2,770 company-owned locations and 35,085 franchised locations, which includes 21,685 locations franchised to conventional franchisees, 7,225 locations licensed to developmental licensees, and 6,175 locations licensed to foreign affiliates.[6][7]

Focusing on its core brand, McDonald's began divesting itself of other chains it had acquired during the 1990s. The company owned a majority stake in Chipotle Mexican Grill until October 2006, when McDonald's fully divested from Chipotle through a stock exchange.[15][16] Until December 2003, it also owned Donatos Pizza, and it owned a small share of Aroma Cafe from 1999 to 2001. On August 27, 2007, McDonald's sold Boston Market to Sun Capital Partners.[17]

Notably, McDonald's has increased shareholder dividends for 25 consecutive years,[18] making it one of the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats.[19][20] The company is ranked 131st on the Fortune 500 of the largest United States corporations by revenue.[21] In October 2012, its monthly sales fell for the first time in nine years.[22] In 2014, its quarterly sales fell for the first time in seventeen years, when its sales dropped for the entirety of 1997.[23]

In the United States, it is reported that drive-throughs account for 70 percent of sales.[24][25] McDonald's closed down 184 restaurants in the United States in 2015, which was 59 more than what they planned to open.[26][27] This move was also the first time McDonald's had a net decrease in the number of locations in the United States since 1970.[27]

Finance

For the fiscal year 2017, McDonalds reported earnings of US$5.2 billion, with an annual revenue of US$22.8 billion, an decrease of 7.3% over the previous fiscal cycle. McDonald's shares traded at over $145 per share, and its market capitalization was valued at over US$134.5 billion in September 2018.

YearRevenue
in mil. USD$
Net income
in mil. USD$
Total Assets
in mil. USD$
Price per Share
in USD$
Locations[28]Employees
2005[29]19,1172,60229,98921.56
2006[29]20,8953,54428,97525.3931,046
2007[29]22,7872,39529,39236.0531.377
2008[30]23,5224,31328,46242.5031,967
2009[31]22,7454,55130,22543.4332,478
2010[32]24,0754,94631,97555.4932,737
2011[33]27,0065,50332,99067.7733,510
2012[34]27,5675,46535,38776.8134,480
2013[35]28,1065,58636,62683.4535,429440,000
2014[36]27,4414,75834,22785.4636,258420,000
2015[37]25,4134,52937,93992.1036,525420,000
2016[38]24,6224,68731,024113.7936,899375,000
2017[39]22,8205,19233,804145.1237,241235,000

Business model

The company currently owns all the land, which is valued at an estimated $16 to $18 billion, on which its restaurants are situated.{{Citation needed|reason=Seems implausible given how many restaurants are located within shopping centres|date=February 2018}} The company earns a significant portion of its revenue from rental payments from franchisees. These rent payments rose 26 percent between 2010 and 2015, accounting for one-fifth of the company's total revenue at the end of the period.[40] In recent times, there have been calls to spin off the company's US holdings into a potential real estate investment trust, but the company announced at its investor conference on November 10, 2015, that this would not happen. The CEO, Steve Easterbrook discussed that pursuing the REIT option would pose too large a risk to the company's business model.[41]

The United Kingdom and Ireland business model is different from the U.S, in that fewer than 30 percent of restaurants are franchised, with the majority under the ownership of the company. McDonald's trains its franchisees and management at Hamburger University located at its Chicago headquarters.[42][43] In other countries, McDonald's restaurants are operated by joint ventures of McDonald's Corporation and other, local entities or governments.[44]

According to Fast Food Nation by Eric Schlosser (2001), nearly one in eight workers in the U.S. have at some time been employed by McDonald's. Employees are encouraged by McDonald's Corp. to maintain their health by singing along to their favorite songs in order to relieve stress, attending church services in order to have a lower blood pressure, and taking two vacations annually in order to reduce risk for myocardial infarction.[45] Fast Food Nation also states that McDonald's is the largest private operator of playgrounds in the U.S., as well as the single largest purchaser of beef, pork, potatoes, and apples. The selection of meats McDonald's uses varies to some extent based on the culture of the host country.[46]

Headquarters

On June 13, 2016, McDonald's confirmed plans to move its global headquarters to Chicago's West Loop neighborhood in the Near West Side. The 608,000-square-foot structure was built on the former site of Harpo Productions (where the Oprah Winfrey Show and several other Harpo productions taped) and opened on June 4, 2018.[1][2]

The McDonald's former headquarters complex, McDonald's Plaza, is located in Oak Brook, Illinois. It sits on the site of the former headquarters and stabling area of Paul Butler, the founder of Oak Brook.[47] McDonald's moved into the Oak Brook facility from an office within the Chicago Loop in 1971.[48]

Board of directors

{{As of | January 2019}}, the board of directors had the following members:[49]
  • Enrique Hernandez, Jr., non-executive chairman. Also president and CEO of Inter-Con Security
  • Lloyd H. Dean, president and CEO of Dignity Health
  • Stephen J. Easterbrook, president and CEO of McDonald's
  • Robert A. Eckert, operating partner of Friedman Fleischer & Lowe
  • Margaret H. Georgiadis, CEO of Ancestry.com
  • Jeanne P. Jackson, CEO of MSP Capital
  • Richard H. Lenny, non-executive of Conagra Brands, Inc.
  • John J. Mulligan, executive vice president and COO of Target Corporation
  • Sheila A. Penrose, non-executive chairman of Jones Lang LaSalle Incorpoated
  • John W. Rogers Jr, chairman and CEO of Ariel Investments, LLC
  • Miles D. White, chairman and CEO of Abbott Laboratories
  • Andrew J. McKenna, chairman emeritus. Also chairman emeritus of Schwarz Supply Source

On March 1, 2015, after being chief brand officer of McDonald's and its former head in the UK and northern Europe, Steve Easterbrook became CEO, succeeding Don Thompson, who stepped down on January 28, 2015.

Global operations

{{See also|List of countries with McDonald's restaurants|International availability of McDonald's products}}

McDonald's has become emblematic of globalization, sometimes referred to as the "McDonaldization" of society. The Economist newspaper uses the "Big Mac Index": the comparison of a Big Mac's cost in various world currencies can be used to informally judge these currencies' purchasing power parity. Switzerland has the most expensive Big Mac in the world as of July 2015, while the country with the least expensive Big Mac is India[50][51] (albeit for a Maharaja Mac—the next cheapest Big Mac is Hong Kong).[52]

Thomas Friedman once said that no country with a McDonald's had gone to war with another.[53][54] However, the "Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention" is not strictly true. Exceptions are the 1989 United States invasion of Panama, NATO's bombing of Serbia in 1999, the 2006 Lebanon War, and the 2008 South Ossetia war. McDonald's suspended operations in its corporate-owned stores in Crimea after Russia annexed the region in 2014.[55] On August 20, 2014, as tensions between the United States and Russia strained over events in Ukraine, and the resultant U.S. sanctions, the Russian government temporarily shut down four McDonald's outlets in Moscow, citing sanitary concerns. The company has operated in Russia since 1990 and at August 2014 had 438 stores across the country.[56] On August 23, 2014, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich ruled out any government move to ban McDonald's and dismissed the notion that the temporary closures had anything to do with the sanctions.[57]

Some observers have suggested that the company should be given credit for increasing the standard of service in markets that it enters. A group of anthropologists in a study entitled Golden Arches East[58] looked at the impact McDonald's had on East Asia and Hong Kong, in particular. When it opened in Hong Kong in 1975, McDonald's was the first restaurant to consistently offer clean restrooms, driving customers to demand the same of other restaurants and institutions. McDonald's has taken to partnering up with Sinopec, the second largest oil company in the People's Republic of China, as it takes advantage of the country's growing use of personal vehicles by opening numerous drive-thru restaurants.[59] McDonald's has opened a McDonald's restaurant and McCafé on the underground premises of the French fine arts museum, The Louvre.[60]

The company stated it would open vegetarian-only restaurants in India by mid-2013.[61] Foreign restaurants are banned in Bermuda, with the exception of KFC, which was present before the current law was passed. Therefore, there are no McDonald's in Bermuda.[62]{{Unreliable source?|date=August 2017}}

On January 9, 2017, 80% of the franchise rights in the mainland China and in Hong Kong were sold for US$2.080 billion to a consortium of CITIC Limited (for 32%) and private equity funds managed by CITIC Capital (for 20%) and Carlyle (for 20%), which CITIC Limited and CITIC Capital would also formed a joint venture to own the stake.[63]

Products

{{Main|List of McDonald's products}}

McDonald's predominantly sells hamburgers, various types of chicken, chicken sandwiches, French fries, soft drinks, breakfast items, and desserts. In most markets, McDonald's offers salads and vegetarian items, wraps and other localized fare. On a seasonal basis, McDonald's offers the McRib sandwich. Some speculate the seasonality of the McRib adds to its appeal.[64]

Products are offered as either "dine-in" (where the customer opts to eat in the restaurant) or "take-out" (where the customer opts to take the food off the premises). "Dine-in" meals are provided on a plastic tray with a paper insert on the floor of the tray. "Take-out" meals are usually delivered with the contents enclosed in a distinctive McDonald's-branded brown paper bag. In both cases, the individual items are wrapped or boxed as appropriate.

Since Steve Easterbrook became CEO of the company, McDonald's has streamlined the menu which in the United States contained nearly 200 items. The company has also looked to introduce healthier options, and removed high-fructose corn syrup from hamburger buns. The company has also removed artificial preservatives from Chicken McNuggets,[65] replacing chicken skin, safflower oil and citric acid found in Chicken McNuggets with pea starch, rice starch and powdered lemon juice.[66]

In September 2018, McDonald's USA announced that they no longer use artificial preservatives, flavors and colors entirely from seven classic burgers sold in the U.S., including the hamburger, cheeseburger, double cheeseburger, McDouble, Quarter Pounder with Cheese, double Quarter Pounder with Cheese and the Big Mac.[67][68] Nevertheless, the pickles will still be made with an artificial preservative, although customers can choose to opt out of getting pickles with their burgers.[69][70]

International menu variations

{{See also|McDonald's products (international)}}

Restaurants in several countries, particularly in Asia, serve soup. This local deviation from the standard menu is a characteristic for which the chain is particularly known, and one which is employed either to abide by regional food taboos (such as the religious prohibition of beef consumption in India) or to make available foods with which the regional market is more familiar (such as the sale of McRice in Indonesia, or Ebi (prawn) Burger in Singapore and Japan).

In Germany and some other Western European countries, McDonald's sells beer. In New Zealand, McDonald's sells meat pies, after the local affiliate partially relaunched the Georgie Pie fast food chain it bought out in 1996.[71]

In the United States and Canada, after limited trials on a regional basis, McDonald's began offering in 2015[72] and 2017,[73] respectively, a partial breakfast menu during all hours its restaurants are open.

Restaurants

{{Globalize/US|section|date=November 2015}}

Types of restaurants

Most standalone McDonald's restaurants offer both counter service and drive-through service, with indoor and sometimes outdoor seating.[74] Drive-Thru, Auto-Mac, Pay and Drive, or "McDrive" as it is known in many countries, often has separate stations for placing, paying for, and picking up orders, though the latter two steps are frequently combined;[74] it was first introduced in Sierra Vista, Arizona in 1975,[75] following the lead of other fast-food chains. The first such restaurant in Britain opened at Fallowfield, Manchester in 1986.[76]

McDrive

In some countries, "McDrive" locations near highways offer no counter service or seating.[77] In contrast, locations in high-density city neighborhoods often omit drive-through service.[78] There are also a few locations, located mostly in downtown districts, that offer a "Walk-Thru" service in place of Drive-Thru.[79]

McCafé

{{Main|McCafé}}

McCafé is a café-style accompaniment to McDonald's restaurants and is a concept created by McDonald's Australia (also known, and marketed, as "Macca's" in Australia), starting with Melbourne in 1993.[80] As of 2016, most McDonald's in Australia have McCafés located within the existing McDonald's restaurant. In Tasmania, there are McCafés in every restaurant, with the rest of the states quickly following suit.[74] After upgrading to the new McCafé look and feel, some Australian restaurants have noticed up to a 60 percent increase in sales. At the end of 2003, there were over 600 McCafés worldwide.

"Create Your Taste" restaurants

From 2015–2016, McDonald's tried a new gourmet burger service and restaurant concept based on other gourmet restaurants such as Shake Shack and Grill'd. It was rolled out for the first time in Australia during the early months of 2015 and expanded to China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Arabia and New Zealand, with ongoing trials in the US market. In dedicated "Create Your Taste" (CYT) kiosks, customers could choose all ingredients including type of bun and meat along with optional extras. In late 2015 the Australian CYT service introduced CYT salads.

After a person had ordered, McDonald's advised that wait times were between 10–15 minutes. When the food was ready, trained crew ('hosts') brought the food to the customer's table. Instead of McDonald's usual cardboard and plastic packaging, CYT food was presented on wooden boards, fries in wire baskets and salads in china bowls with metal cutlery. A higher price applied.

In November 2016, Create Your Taste was replaced by a "Signature Crafted Recipes" program designed to be more efficient and less expensive.[81]

Other

Some locations are connected to gas stations/convenience stores,[82] while others called McExpress have limited seating and/or menu or may be located in a shopping mall. Other McDonald's are located in Walmart stores. McStop is a location targeted at truckers and travelers which may have services found at truck stops.[83]

In Sweden, customers who order a happy meal can use the meal's container for a pair of happy goggles.[84] The company created a game for the goggles known as "Slope Stars.[84] " McDonald's predicts happy goggles will continue in other countries.[84] In the Netherlands, McDonald's has introduced McTrax that doubles as a recording studio; it reacts to touch.[84] They can create their own beats with a synth and tweak sounds with special effects.[84]

Special diet

{{Expand section|1=Details of other McDonald's restaurants where special dietry requirements are catered for|date=November 2015}}

The first kosher McDonald's was established in 1997 at the Abasto de Buenos Aires mall in Buenos Aires, Argentina. There are also many kosher branches in Israel.[85][86]

Playgrounds

McDonald's playgrounds are called McDonald's PlayPlace. Some McDonald's in suburban areas and certain cities feature large indoor or outdoor playgrounds. The first PlayPlace with the familiar crawl-tube design with ball pits and slides was introduced in 1987 in the US, with many more being constructed soon after.{{citation needed|date= November 2018}}

McDonald's Next

McDonald's Next use open-concept design and offer "Create Your Taste" digital ordering. The concept store also offers free mobile device charging and table service after 6:00 pm. The first store opened in Hong Kong in December 2015.[87]

2006 redesign

In 2006, McDonald's introduced its "Forever Young" brand by redesigning all of its restaurants, the first major redesign since the 1970s.[88][89]

The goal of the redesign is to be more like a coffee shop, similar to Starbucks. The design includes wooden tables, faux-leather chairs, and muted colors; the red was muted to terracotta, the yellow was shifted to golden for a more "sunny" look, and olive and sage green were also added.

To create a warmer look, the restaurants have less plastic and more brick and wood, with modern hanging lights to produce a softer glow. Many restaurants now feature free Wi-Fi and flat-screen TVs. Other upgrades include double drive-thrus, flat roofs instead of the angled red roofs, and replacing fiber glass with wood. Also, instead of the familiar golden arches, the restaurants now feature "semi-swooshes" (half of a golden arch), similar to the Nike swoosh.[90]

Smoking ban

McDonald's began banning smoking in 1994 when it restricted customers from smoking within its 1,400 wholly owned restaurants.[91]

Treatment of employees

Automation

Since the late 1990s, McDonald's has attempted to replace employees with electronic kiosks which would perform actions such as taking orders and accepting money. In 1999, McDonald's first tested "E-Clerks" in suburban Chicago, Illinois, and Wyoming, Michigan, with the devices being able to "save money on live staffers" and attracting larger purchase amounts than average employees.[92]

In 2013, the University of Oxford estimated that in the succeeding decades, there was a 92% probability of food preparation and serving to become automated in fast food establishments.[93] By 2016, McDonald's "Create Your Taste" electronic kiosks were seen in some restaurants internationally where customers could custom order meals. As employees pushed for higher wages in the late-2010s, some believed that fast food companies such as McDonald's would use the devices to cut costs for employing individuals.[94]

Wages

On August 5, 2013, The Guardian revealed that 90 percent of McDonald's UK workforce are on zero hour contracts, making it possibly the largest such private sector employer in the country.[95] A study released by Fast Food Forward conducted by Anzalone Liszt Grove Research showed that approximately 84 percent of all fast food employees working in New York City in April 2013 had been paid less than their legal wages by their employers.[96]

From 2007 to 2011, fast food workers in the US drew an average of $7 billion of public assistance annually resulting from receiving low wages.[97] The McResource website advised employees to break their food into smaller pieces to feel fuller, seek refunds for unopened holiday purchases, sell possessions online for quick cash, and to "quit complaining" as "stress hormone levels rise by 15 percent after ten minutes of complaining."[98] In December 2013, McDonald's shut down the McResource website amidst negative publicity and criticism. McDonald's plans to continue an internal telephone help line through which its employees can obtain advice on work and life problems.[99]

Liberal think tank, the Roosevelt Institute, accuses some McDonald's restaurants of actually paying less than the minimum wage to entry positions due to 'rampant' wage theft.[100] In South Korea, McDonald's pays part-time employees $5.50 an hour and is accused of paying less with arbitrary schedules adjustments and pay delays.[101] In late 2015, Anonymous aggregated data collected by Glassdoor suggests that McDonald's in the United States pays entry-level employees between $7.25 an hour and $11 an hour, with an average of $8.69 an hour. Shift managers get paid an average of $10.34 an hour. Assistant managers get paid an average of $11.57 an hour.[102] McDonald's CEO, Steve Easterbrook, currently earns an annual salary of $1,100,000.[103] His total compensation for 2017 was $21,761,052.[104]

Strikes

{{See also|Fast food worker strikes}}

McDonald's workers have on occasions decided to strike over pay, with most of the employees on strike seeking to be paid $15.00.[105] When interviewed about the strikes occurring, former McDonald's CEO Ed Rensi stated: "It's cheaper to buy a $35,000 robotic arm than it is to hire an employee who's inefficient making $15 an hour bagging french fries" with Rensi explaining that increasing employee wages could possibly take away from entry-level jobs.[106] However, according to Easterbrook, increasing wages and benefits for workers saw a 6% increase in customer satisfaction when comparing 2015's first quarter data to the first quarter of 2016, with greater returns seen as a result.[106]

In September 2017, two British McDonald's stores agreed to a strike over zero-hours contracts for staff. Picket lines were formed around the two stores in Crayford and Cambridge. The strike was supported by the Leader of the Opposition, Jeremy Corbyn.[107][108]

Working conditions

In March 2015, McDonald's workers in 19 US cities filed 28 health and safety complaints with the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration which allege that low staffing, lack of protective gear, poor training and pressure to work fast has resulted in injuries. The complaints also allege that, because of a lack of first aid supplies, workers were told by management to treat burn injuries with condiments such as mayonnaise and mustard.[109] The Fight for $15 labor organization aided the workers in filing the complaints.[110]

Animal welfare standards

In 2015, McDonald's pledged to stop using eggs from battery cage facilities by 2025. Since McDonald's purchases over 2 billion eggs per year or 4 percent of eggs produced in the United States, the switch is expected to have a major impact on the egg industry and is part of a general trend toward cage-free eggs driven by consumer concern over the harsh living conditions of hens.[111][112] The aviary systems from which the new eggs will be sourced are troubled by much higher mortality rates, as well as introducing environmental and worker safety problems.[113] The high hen mortality rate, which is more than double that of battery cage systems, will require new research to mitigate. The facilities also have higher ammonia levels due to faeces being kicked up into the air. Producers raised concerns about the production cost, which is expected to increase by 36 percent.[114]

McDonald's continues to source pork from facilities that use gestation crates, and in 2012 pledged to phase them out.[115]

Marketing and advertising

{{Main|McDonald's advertising}}

McDonald's has for decades maintained an extensive advertising campaign. In addition to the usual media (television, radio, and newspaper), the company makes significant use of billboards and signage, and also sponsors sporting events ranging from Little League to the FIFA World Cup and Olympic Games.[116] Television has played a central role in the company's advertising strategy.[117] To date, McDonald's has used 23 different slogans in United States advertising, as well as a few other slogans for select countries and regions.[118]

Space exploration

McDonald's and NASA explored an advertising agreement for a planned mission to the asteroid 449 Hamburga; however, the spacecraft was eventually cancelled.[119]

Children's advertising

{{Main|Ronald McDonald|McDonaldland}}

Sports awards and honors

{{See also|:Category:McDonald's High School All-Americans}}

McDonald's is the title sponsor of the McDonald's All-American Game, all-star basketball games played each year for American and Canadian boys' and girls' high school basketball graduates.

Charity

{{See also|Ronald McDonald House Charities}}

McHappy Day

McHappy Day is an annual event at McDonald's, during which a percentage of the day's sales go to charity. It is the signature fundraising event for Ronald McDonald House Charities.[120]

In 2007, it was celebrated in 17 countries: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Brazil, Canada, England, Finland, France, Guatemala, Hungary, Ireland, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the United States, and Uruguay.

According to the Australian McHappy Day website, McHappy Day raised $20.4 million in 2009. The goal for 2010 was $20.8 million.[121]

McDonald's Monopoly donation

In 1995, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital received an anonymous letter postmarked in Dallas, Texas, containing a $1 million winning McDonald's Monopoly game piece. McDonald's officials came to the hospital, accompanied by a representative from the accounting firm Arthur Andersen, who examined the card under a jeweler's eyepiece, handled it with plastic gloves, and verified it as a winner.[122] Although game rules prohibited the transfer of prizes, McDonald's waived the rule and made the annual $50,000 annuity payments for the full 20-year period through 2014, even after learning that the piece was sent by an individual involved in an embezzlement scheme intended to defraud McDonald's.

McRefugee

{{See also|McRefugee}}

McRefugees are poor people in Hong Kong, Japan, and China who use McDonald's 24-hour restaurants as a temporary hostel. One in five of Hong Kong's population lives below the poverty line. The rise of McRefugees was first documented by photographer Suraj Katra in 2013.[123]

Criticism

In 1990, activists from a small group known as London Greenpeace (no connection to the international group Greenpeace) distributed leaflets entitled What's wrong with McDonald's?, criticizing its environmental, health, and labor record. The corporation wrote to the group demanding they desist and apologize, and, when two of the activists refused to back down, sued them for libel in one of the longest cases in British civil law. A documentary film of the McLibel Trial has been shown in several countries.[124]

In the late 1980s, Phil Sokolof, a millionaire businessman who had suffered a heart attack at the age of 43, took out full-page newspaper ads in New York, Chicago, and other large cities accusing McDonald's menu of being a threat to American health, and asking them to stop using beef tallow to cook their french fries.[125]

Though the company objected, the term "McJob" was added to Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary in 2003.[126] The term was defined as "a low-paying job that requires little skill and provides little opportunity for advancement".[127]

In 2001, Eric Schlosser's book Fast Food Nation included criticism of the business practices of McDonald's. Among the critiques were allegations that McDonald's (along with other companies within the fast food industry) uses its political influence to increase its profits at the expense of people's health and the social conditions of its workers. The book also brought into question McDonald's advertisement techniques in which it targets children. While the book did mention other fast-food chains, it focused primarily on McDonald's.

In 2002, vegetarian groups, largely Hindu and Buddhist, successfully sued McDonald's for misrepresenting its French fries as vegetarian, when they contained beef broth.[128]

Morgan Spurlock's 2004 documentary film Super Size Me claimed that McDonald's food was contributing to the increase of obesity in society and that the company was failing to provide nutritional information about its food for its customers. Six weeks after the film premiered, McDonald's announced that it was eliminating the super size option, and was creating the adult Happy Meal.

In 2006, an unsanctioned McDonald's Video Game by Italian group Molleindustria was released online. It is parody of the business practices of the corporate giant, taking the guise of a tycoon style business simulation game. In the game, the player plays the role of a McDonald's CEO, choosing whether or not to use controversial practices like genetically altered cow feed, plowing over rainforests, and corrupting public officials. McDonald's issued a statement distancing itself from the game.[129]

In January 2014, it was reported that McDonald's was accused of having used a series of tax maneuvers to avoid taxes in France. The company confirmed that tax authorities had visited McDonald's French headquarters in Paris but insisted that it had not done anything wrong, saying, "McDonald's firmly denies the accusation made by L'Express according to which McDonald's supposedly hid part of its revenue from taxes in France."[130]

Company responses to criticism

In response to public pressure, McDonald's has sought to include more healthy choices in its menu and has introduced a new slogan to its recruitment posters: "Not bad for a McJob".[131] The word McJob, first attested in the mid-1980s[126] and later popularized by Canadian novelist Douglas Coupland in his book Generation X, has become a buzz word for low-paid, unskilled work with few prospects or benefits and little security. McDonald's disputes this definition of McJob. In 2007, the company launched an advertising campaign with the slogan "Would you like a career with that?" on Irish television, asserting that its jobs have good prospects.

In an effort to respond to growing consumer awareness of food provenance, the fast-food chain changed its supplier of both coffee beans and milk. UK chief executive Steve Easterbrook said: "British consumers are increasingly interested in the quality, sourcing, and ethics of the food and drink they buy".[132] In a bid to tap into the ethical consumer market,[133] McDonald's switched to using coffee beans taken from stocks that are certified by the Rainforest Alliance, a conservation group. Additionally, in response to pressure, McDonald's UK started using organic milk supplies for its bottled milk and hot drinks, although it still uses conventional milk in its milkshakes, and in all of its dairy products in the United States.[134] According to a report published by Farmers Weekly in 2007, the quantity of milk used by McDonald's could have accounted for as much as 5 percent of the UK's organic milk output.[135]

McDonald's announced on May 22, 2008, that, in the United States and Canada, it would switch to using cooking oil that contains no trans fats for its french fries, and canola-based oil with corn and soy oils, for its baked items, pies and cookies, by year's end.[136][137]

With regard to acquiring chickens from suppliers who use CAK/CAS methods of slaughter, McDonald's says that it needs to see more research "to help determine whether any CAS system in current use is optimal from an animal welfare perspective."[138]

Environmental record

After McDonald's received criticism for its environmental policies in the 1970s, it began to make substantial progress in reducing its use of materials.[139] For instance, an "average meal" in the 1970s{{mdash}}a Big Mac, fries, and a drink{{mdash}}required {{convert|46|g|||}} of packaging; today, it requires only {{convert|25|g|||}}, a 46 percent reduction.[140] In addition, McDonald's eliminated the need for intermediate containers for cola by having a delivery system that pumps syrup directly from the delivery truck into storage containers, saving {{convert|2000000|lb|tonne|spell=in|abbr=off}} of packaging annually.[141] Overall, weight reductions in packaging and products, as well as increased usage of bulk packaging, ultimately decreased packaging by {{convert|24000000|lb|tonne|spell=in|abbr=off}} annually.[142] McDonald's effort to reduce solid waste by using less packaging and by promoting the use of recycled-content materials has been recognized by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.[143]

In 1990, McDonald's worked with the Environmental Defense Fund to stop using "clam shell"-shaped styrofoam food containers to house its food products.[144] Twenty years later, McDonald's announced they would try replacing styrofoam coffee cups with an alternative material.[145]

In April 2008, McDonald's announced that 11 of its Sheffield, England restaurants have been engaged in a biomass trial program that cut its waste and carbon footprint by half in the area. In this trial, wastes from the restaurants were collected by Veolia Environmental Services and were used to produce energy at a power plant. McDonald's plans to expand this project, although the lack of biomass power plants in the United States will prevent this plan from becoming a national standard there anytime soon.[146] In addition, in Europe, McDonald's has been recycling vegetable grease by converting it to fuel for its diesel trucks.[147]

McDonald's uses a corn-based bioplastic to produce containers for some of its products. The environmental benefits of this technology are controversial, with critics noting that biodegradation is slow, produces greenhouse gases, and that contamination of traditional plastic waste streams with bioplastics can complicate recycling efforts.[148]

In an effort to reduce energy usage by 25 percent in its restaurants, McDonald's opened a prototype restaurant in Chicago in 2009 with the intention of using the model in its other restaurants throughout the world. Building on past efforts, specifically a restaurant it opened in Sweden in 2000 that was the first to intentionally incorporate green ideas, McDonald's designed the Chicago site to save energy by incorporating old and new ideas such as managing storm water, using skylights for more natural lighting, and installing some partitions and tabletops made from recycled goods.[149]

Legal cases

{{Main|McDonald's legal cases}}

McDonald's has been involved in a number of lawsuits and other legal cases, most of which involved trademark disputes. The company has threatened many food businesses with legal action unless it drops the Mc or Mac from trading names.

European Union

In April 2017, Irish fast-food chain Supermac's submitted a request to the European Union Property Office to cancel McDonald's owned trademarks within the European Union, claiming that McDonald's engaged in "trademark bullying; registering brand names... which are simply stored away in a war chest to use against future competitors", after the trademarks had prevented Supermac's from expanding out of Ireland. The EUIPO ruled in Supermac's favour, finding that McDonald's "has not proven genuine use" of many trademarks, cancelling McDonald's owned trademarks such as 'Big Mac' and certain 'Mc' related trademarks within the European Union.[150][151][152]

Burger King responded by trolling McDonald's by giving their sandwiches names like "Like a Big Mac But Juicier", "Like a Big Mac, But Actually Big" and "Big Mac-ish But Flame-Grilled of Course".[153]

Malaysia

On September 8, 2009, McDonald's Malaysian operations lost a lawsuit to prevent another restaurant calling itself McCurry. McDonald's lost in an appeal to Malaysia's highest court, the Federal Court.[154]

Australia

In April 2007, in Perth, Western Australia, McDonald's pleaded guilty to five charges relating to the employment of children under 15 in one of its outlets and was fined A$8,000.[155]

United Kingdom

The longest-running legal action of all time in the UK was the McLibel case against two defendants who criticized a number of aspects of the company. The trial lasted 10 years and called 130 witnesses. The European Court of Human Rights deemed that the unequal resources of the litigants breached the defendants rights to freedom of speech and biased the trial. The result was widely seen as a "PR disaster."[156]

United States

A famous legal case in the US involving McDonald's was the 1994 decision in Liebeck v. McDonald's Restaurants where Albuquerque, New Mexico, resident Stella Liebeck was initially awarded $2.86 million (equivalent to ${{inflation|US-GDP|2.86|1994|r=2|fmt=c}} million in {{inflation/year|US-GDP}}){{Inflation/fn|US-GDP}} after she suffered third-degree burns after spilling a scalding cup of McDonald's coffee on herself. The award was later reduced to $640,000 (equivalent to ${{inflation|US-GDP|.64|1994|r=1|fmt=c}} million in {{inflation/year|US-GDP}}).[157][158]

Use of genetically modified food

In April 2014, it was reported that McDonald's in Europe will use chicken meat that was produced by using genetically modified animal feed. Greenpeace argues that McDonald's saves less than one Eurocent for each chicken burger and goes down a path not desired by its customers.[159]

See also

{{Wikipedia books|McDonald's}}
  • Arcos Dorados Holdings
  • The Founder — a 2016 film detailing the creation and controversial business history of McDonald's, that is also a biopic of Ray Kroc
  • List of hamburger restaurants
  • List of largest employers
  • List of restaurant chains
  • MaDonal — a restaurant operating in northern Iraq that copies many features of McDonald's, illicitly
  • Maxime, McDuff & McDo — 2002 documentary film about the unionizing of a McDonald's in Montreal, Quebec, Canada
{{Portalbar|Fast food|Companies|Chicago|Illinois|McDonald's}}

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155. ^{{cite news|title=McDonald's fined for employing underage workers |date=April 12, 2007 |publisher=ABC News |url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200704/s1895071.htm |accessdate=April 12, 2007 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070418214623/http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200704/s1895071.htm |archivedate=April 18, 2007 }}
156. ^{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4266741.stm|title=McLibel: Longest case in English history|publisher=BBC News|date=February 15, 2005|accessdate=January 17, 2016}}
157. ^{{cite news|url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/darryl-s-weiman-md-jd/the-mcdonalds-coffee-case_b_14002362.html|title=The McDonalds’ Coffee Case|first=Darryl S.|last=Weiman|work=Huffington Post|date=July 1, 2018|access-date=August 25, 2018}}
158. ^Do You Know the Full Story Behind the Infamous McDonald's Coffee Case and How Corporations Used it to Promote Tort Reform? Democracy Now! January 25, 2011.
159. ^{{Cite news|title = McDonald's: Gentechnik im Burger|url = http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/unternehmen/mcdonald-s-gentechnik-in-chickenburger-und-chickennuggets-a-966345.html|newspaper = Der Spiegel|date = April 27, 2014|access-date = December 1, 2015|language = German}}

Further reading

{{refbegin|30em}}
  • {{cite news | last=Evans | first=Stephen | title=McDonald's: The journey to health | publisher=BBC News | date=April 20, 2004 | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/3641603.stm | ref=harv | accessdate=June 30, 2016}}
  • {{cite web | last=Horovitz | first=Bruce | title=McDonald's testing seasoned fries | website=USA Today | date=May 8, 2014 | url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2014/05/08/mcdonalds-french-fries-fast-food-restaurants/8857099/ | ref=harv | accessdate=June 30, 2016}}
  • {{cite journal |last=Love |first=John F. |title=Big Macs, Fries, and Real Estate |date=April 1987 |journal=Financial Executive |issue=4 |pages=20–6|url=http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/14781568/big-macs-fries-real-estate}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia |encyclopedia=International directory of company histories |volume=67 |editor=Thomas Derdak and Jay P. Pederson |edition=3rd |publisher=St. James Press |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-55862-512-9 |article=McDonald's |pages=108–9}}
  • [https://books.google.com/books?id=NoqFygAACAAJ "McDonald's : Behind The Arches"] by John F. Love, paperback July 1, 1995
  • "Grinding It Out: The Making of McDonald's" by Ray Kroc, 1977 {{ISBN|0809282593}}
  • "Ray & Joan: The Man Who Made the McDonald's Fortune and the Woman Who Gave It All Away" by Lisa Napoli, 2016 {{ISBN|1101984953}}
  • "Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal" by Eric Schlosser, 2001 {{ISBN|0395977894}}
{{refend}}

External links

{{Sisterlinks|collapsible=true|wikt=no|voy=Fast food in North America|d=Q38076}}
  • [https://www.mcdonalds.com Official Website]
  • [https://corporate.mcdonalds.com Corporate Website]
  • [https://www.instagram.com/mcdonalds/ McDonald's] on Instagram
{{Finance links
| name = McDonald's
| symbol = MCD
| sec_cik = MCD
| yahoo = MCD
| google = MCD
}}{{McDonald's}}{{Navboxes
|list={{Dow Jones Industrial Average companies}}{{Fast-food chains of the United States}}{{Illinois Corporations}}{{Food chains in Poland}}{{UK Food}}
}}{{Authority control}}

14 : McDonald's|1940 establishments in California|1955 establishments in Illinois|Companies based in DuPage County, Illinois|Companies in the Dow Jones Industrial Average|Companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange|Fast-food chains of the United States|Fast-food franchises|Fast-food hamburger restaurants|Multinational food companies|Oak Brook, Illinois|Restaurant chains in the United States|Restaurants established in 1940|American companies established in 1940

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