So “Papa” John, not long after hosting Mitt Romney to a little at-home fund-raiser at his Anchorage manse, is now declaring that the cost of providing his employees Obamacare will require him to pass along the costs to those who consume his pizza, in order to protect the shareholders’ interests?
I find this fascinating, first because of his apparent priorities: Shareholders first, employees second, and his customers, it seems, dead last. But it’s also curious because of his apparent limited command of simple business economics: Raise prices, sales drop off, shareholders suffer all the same.
Deliver a quality product, John, and shareholder profits should follow.
I won’t speak of boycotts here. We’ve been down that road with Chic … er, never mind … and in any case, I’ve always gone more for the locals, Coals and Papalino’s and Danny Mac’s and Impellizzeri’s and Clifton’s and … well, you get the idea.
But seriously, folks, at the risk of another interminable political thread, let’s see a show of nonpartisan hands: Who thinks it’s a good idea for a corporate mogul as public as “Papa” to be getting so out front with his pro-Republican, anti-Obamacare ideas during an election year?
Papa John's Schnatter says health care law will raise pizza pricesBusiness First
Wednesday, August 8, 2012, 7:06am EDTThe founder of Papa John's International Inc. says President Obama's health care law will cost consumers more on their pizza.
John Schnatter, CEO of the Louisville-based pizza chain (NASDAQ: PZZA), told shareholders in a conference call last week that the health care law's changes — set to go into effect in 2014 — will result in higher costs for the company, which it intends to pass onto consumers, according to Politico, a political-oriented Web site.
The health care law could cost the company 11 to 14 cents per pizza, or 15 to 20 cents per order, said Schnatter, who supports Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.
Politico quoted Schnatter as saying, "If Obamacare is in fact not repealed, we will find tactics to shallow out any Obamacare costs and core strategies to pass that cost onto consumers in order to protect our shareholders' best interests."
Last week, Business First reported that Papa John's earned $14.6 million in the second quarter, on revenue of $318.6 million.
Full story here ...
http://www.bizjournals.com/louisville/b ... 2012-08-08