
Once the most popular fast-food chain in America, having sold over 300 billion burgers by 2013 and 6.5 million up until early this year, McDonald’s seems it’s no longer ‘my kind of place’ as its sales suffered the most significant drop since the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The reason? Americans are concerned about the US economy with Donald Trump at the helm, imposing tariffs that even he doesn’t seem to understand will hurt the country’s consumers more than they will exporters, who raise prices to cover the additional levies.
Unmoved by the tie-in with the Minecraft movie and extended price deals, customers made fewer visits to the world’s largest burger chain in the first three months of this year, compared to 2024, according to a BBC report.
Chief Executive Chris Kempczinski said customers were “grappling with uncertainty,” but assured investors that the second-largest fast-food chain in the world could “navigate even the toughest of market conditions.” McDonald’s was dethroned as the king of food chains by China-based Mixue Ice Cream and Tea earlier this year.
‘They can always count on McDonald’s for exceptional value’
“McDonald’s figures reflect the first two months of Donald Trump’s presidency, with the reporting period ending just before his barrage of tariff announcements on 2 April,” the BBC wrote.
Kempczinski told the BBC, “Consumers today are grappling with uncertainty, but they can always count on McDonald’s for exceptional value.”
Trump and his staff continue to ask Americans to trust him and his policies, which they insist will bring more jobs to the US as firms base factories and operations in the country to avoid the president’s new taxes.
However, many companies, economists, and the population are not too convinced. They all believe his plans will be hard to pull off and will translate into job losses and economic pain, at least in the short term.