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Cramer Remix: This millennial habit is helping to keep a lid on wage inflation
Cramer Remix: This millennial habit is helping to keep a lid on wage inflation · CNBC

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CNBC's Jim Cramer on Wednesday took a deeper look at Dirty Lemon, the health-conscious drink owned by Iris Nova, to understand how its business model could help keep down inflation: embrace the honor system.

"If this method catches on, it's easy to see how our economy can keep growing with hardly any meaningful wage inflation," the "Mad Money" host said. "Rather than paying their workers more, companies that used to hire plenty are now finding ways to hire fewer people."

Cramer introduced the private company to viewers earlier this week in an interview with Iris Nova CEO Zak Normandin. Instead of hiring cashiers, Dirty Lemon has a store in New York City's Tribeca neighborhood, and will soon open a second in the city's Hudson Yards area, where patrons voluntarily pay more than $10 for lemon-based drinks via text message.

No cashiers? No problem. The company unlocked a way to target millennials and hire fewer people by leveraging digital tools, Cramer said.

"At a certain point, it's just much cheaper for businesses to automate rather than hire new people," he said.

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How do you like me now?

Bankers do not necessarily have to be liked — people just have to like their numbers, CNBC's Jim Cramer said Wednesday.

"The bankers are still regarded as gangsters on Capitol Hill. I just want them to put on a good show when they start reporting earnings in 48 hours," the "Mad Money" host said. "If they do, all will be forgiven, at least on Wall Street, and their stocks will roar."

Earlier, the top brass of the biggest U.S. financial institutions appeared before the House Financial Services Committee , where lawmakers grilled the CEOs with questions about the financial crisis a decade ago.

Cramer called it a "travesty" that no one was sent to prison for their roles in lending practices that helped caused the meltdown in 2008. But most of the bankers at Wednesday's hearing, he pointed out, were not running their respective companies at the time of the crisis.

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Making room

Kohl's KSS CEO Michelle Gass told CNBC that partnering with companies, such as Planet Fitness PLNT and Amazon AMZN , will be integral to cutting costs and rightsizing its stores in efforts to drive traffic and grow sales.

The department chain, whose locations typically cover more than 80,000 square feet, signed a deal with Planet Fitness last month to convert as much as 25,000 square feet at 10 stores into a gym to double down on its active and wellness initiative.