Comment on "If you can't afford to tip 40%, then don't eat out"
Dryad@lemmy.world 6 days ago
If you can’t afford to pay your employees a living wage, do better.
Comment on "If you can't afford to tip 40%, then don't eat out"
Dryad@lemmy.world 6 days ago
If you can’t afford to pay your employees a living wage, do better.
krisevol@lemmus.org 6 days ago
It’s kinda the opposite. Customers prefer places that pay very little. They did studies with consumers and told them one menu pays a living wage, but when they say the slight increase in prices they choose the other option.
It’s not the employer, it’s largely the customers that continue this trend
pjwestin@lemmy.world 5 days ago
Yeah, this is unfortunately why tipping culture can’t be phased out by individual restaurateurs trying to create change. Consumers would rather pay $20 for a meal and tip $4 than pay $22 upfront and not tip. I imagine it’s the same psychological principle that makes people think paying $99.99 is significantly better than $100. The only solution is eliminating the tipped minimum wage all together so that everyone gets the same minimum wage (also, increase the minimum wage at least 200% while you’re at it).
That being said, it’s not just the customers. Whenever a state is about to eliminate the tipped wage, the National Restaurant Association (yes, another evil NRA) spends millions trying to kill it. It happened here in MA a few years ago; they convinced both servers and customers to vote down a referendum to eliminate the tipped minimum wage, even though both of those groups were just subsidizing the restaurant owners.
AA5B@lemmy.world 6 days ago
Of course given the choice, customers prefer to pay less for the same thing. That’s basic economics. It kind of needs to be all or nothing.
I voted to end tip wages, but of course I’ll go to the place that saves me money. This is why ending tip wages for all has to be the starting point
Dryad@lemmy.world 6 days ago
Got a link to these studies? Who is “they?”