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  • Top 10 Reasons To Abolish the Tipping System in Restaurants

  • 10. Very Few Careers Are Structured Like That

  • While other jobs do receive tips, not many other professions are as tip based as waiting

  • tables. There are a lot of jobs that are commission based, but that’s much different than being

  • paid through tips. Commissions are a structured amount paid out by the company. Tips, on the

  • other hand, are not structured or guaranteed. It’s just an unwritten rule that it’s

  • up to the customer to pay the amount they deem necessary. The restaurant doesn’t pay

  • the staff anything other than their minimum wage.

  • Imagine if we paid people in all fields that way. Would you want to pay your doctor in

  • tips? What about a home contractor? It’s unfathomable. So why are people who take orders,

  • and serve food and drinks that they don’t cook or prepare, paid mostly with tips? It

  • comes down to the fact that restaurants are notoriously risky businesses. 70% of them

  • that survive past their first year only stay open for three to five years. Tipping is a

  • way for the restaurant to minimize risk by not spending money on staff. And if a restaurant

  • is having a slow period where less money is coming in, it frees owners from the responsibility

  • of paying staff.

  • 9. More Tax Revenue

  • When it comes to tax reporting, tips often stay off the books. It’s up to servers to

  • report how much they make so it can be taxed, but many servers don’t report every cent

  • they earned. It’s one of the benefits of being a server, although thisperkis

  • quite illegal.

  • The problem is a lot of money is going un-taxed. For example, in Canada, $6 billion is left

  • annually in tips, while in the United States it’s $44 billion. While servers do report

  • some of their earnings, there’s so much that isn’t reported that in both Canada

  • and the United States there are task forces just to crack down on the problem. A fixed

  • income for servers would create more tax revenue, which would be less of a hassle for servers

  • because they don’t have the taxman tracking them downand tax agencies wouldn’t

  • have to put money into fighting the problem.

  • 8. The Price of Dining Out Wouldn’t Be Affected

  • One argument against getting rid of tipping is that people will be scared off by the high

  • prices on the menu. Which is ridiculous, because if a restaurant raised their prices by 15-20%

  • and eliminated tipping, customers would be paying the exact same amount. According to

  • some studies, a majority of people would actually prefer that servers receive a salary. And

  • servers receiving salaries isn’t unheard of. In places like Japan and Europe, they

  • don’t tip servers; all the costs of running a restaurant, including salaries, are factored

  • into the price of the food.

  • 7. Less Turnover

  • A big problem that restaurants deal with is staff turnover. If servers aren’t happy

  • with their tips, they can look for greener pastures elsewhere. The problem with the tipping

  • system is that servers can never really be sure how much money theyll make. So if

  • they start a job and the tips aren’t at the level they expected, they may quit and

  • find another job.

  • Turnover can reflect poorly on the restaurant, and it’s important to never underestimate

  • the value of a competent and knowledgeable staff. The more training someone has and the

  • more comfortable they are doing their job, the better employee theyll be. Also, if

  • a restaurant can offer potential servers stability and security, it may be more appealing. Finally,

  • if a server knows exactly what theyre getting paid, it might attract good servers who are

  • less stressed out, because they don’t have to worry about making enough tips to survive.

  • 6. Better Dining Experience

  • When someone goes out for dinner, one question that’s often asked of the server isWhat

  • do you recommend?” While we hope servers would give an honest answer, as a consumer

  • you have to realize that it’s in their best interest to suggest the most expensive item

  • on the menu. After all, they essentially get a 10-30% commission on whatever the diner

  • chooses.

  • If they were receiving a salary instead of a tip based on percentage, they may be more

  • honest and you could try some new dishes. This would be beneficial to owners as well

  • if a person tries the expensive meal and doesn’t like it, they may never come back

  • to the restaurant. But if they have a less expensive meal they enjoy, it could mean repeat

  • business. So is it better for an owner to have someone spend extra money on one meal,

  • or repeat purchases of a less expensive meal?

  • 5. Misplaced Responsibility

  • Since 1991, restaurant owners can pay servers as little as $2.13 per hour if the tips make

  • up for the rest of the wage. That’s a lot of responsibility placed on the customer,

  • especially since tips aren’t technically considered mandatory. By keeping the minimum

  • wage for wait staff so low, people will feel more compelled to leave a tip even if the

  • service doesn’t warrant it.

  • It’s also a large burden to place on the wait staff. Let’s say a waitress works at

  • a terrible steakhouse. The owner is cheap, so they buy terrible cuts of meat. The kitchen

  • manager takes the steaks and freezes them. A month later, the chef thaws the steaks and

  • then overcooks them. The waitress, whose only job is to take orders and deliver food and

  • drinks, brings the overcooked, formerly frozen steak to the customer. The customer is displeased,

  • quite possibly vocally, to the waitress. At the end of the meal, the customer pays the

  • bill but doesn’t leave a tip. Everyone who had something to do with the restaurant and

  • the quality of food gets paid their usual wage and the owner keeps any profit, but the

  • server is left with only $2.13 from her hourly wage. That’s a major imbalance in responsibility.

  • 4. Tips Don’t Affect Service

  • An argument that’s made for tipping is that if someone is working for tips, then their

  • performance earns them that that money. Therefore, if they want a tip, their service better be

  • top notch. But studies show that the relationship between tipping behavior and the quality of

  • service isn’t significant. People will leave their standard tip, usually about 15%, no

  • matter what the service is like. Even if the service is poor, 70% of people still feel

  • obligated to leave a tip. It’s common knowledge that servers make less than minimum wage,

  • and by tipping them poorly when you know someone is relying on that money to survive, a lot

  • of pressure and guilt is placed on the customer.

  • 3. Makes and Keeps Servers Poor

  • There are currently only seven American states that require tipped workers to receive the

  • same minimum wage as other workers. Otherwise, servers receive just $2.13 per hour. There’s

  • been little change since 1991, even to account for inflation, while people are tipping less

  • than they used to. The economy has changed drastically since the booming 1990s. So when

  • people go out for dinner, knowing their own financial situation, and are given the choice

  • of spending an extra 5% to 30% on a meal, are they going to spend more or less? Due

  • to the fact that the minimum wage hasn’t changed while tips have decreased, servers

  • often find themselves living below the poverty line.

  • 2. Tipping Makes No Sense

  • Many people don’t change their tipping percentage every time they go out. They generally have

  • a set percentage, and tip that amount almost every time. Herein lies a problem. Bruce McAdams,

  • a professor at the University of Guelph’s School of Hotel and Food Administration, gives

  • an example of going out for a bottle of wine with his wife. Theyre celebrating, and

  • buy a $150 bottle of wine. The waiter opens the wine and leaves it at their table, and

  • theyll pay him a 15% tip, which is $22.50. At the table next to them, another couple

  • orders a $50 bottle of wine from the same waiter, and they too leave a 15% tip, which

  • would be $7.50. Same server, same level of service, but the couple who spent more money

  • has to pay a higher service charge. And that’s counterproductive, because isn’t the goal

  • of a business to encourage customers to buy more stuff? Is there any other business that

  • forces people to pay a higher service charge for spending more money? In most other industries,

  • when you spend more you actually save more.

  • 1. Tipping Can Be Racist, Sexist and Classist

  • Sadly, tipping is a double-edged sword when it comes to prejudice. Customers have a tendency

  • to show biasfor example, white servers tend to make better tips than black servers.

  • Also, attractive blonde women tend to do very well in the tip department, even if the service

  • isn’t as good.

  • Customers aren’t the only ones to show their prejudices. Servers may have a bias against

  • customers of certain races or social classes because they think they won’t tip well.

  • Servers might not treat those customers as well and may even hurry them along, in the

  • hopes that theyll leave and people who look more likely to tip will sit at their

  • table. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy.

  • Sadly, another problem is that 80% of female servers report having been sexually harassed.

  • The harassment was even more predominate in states that had the $2.13 minimum wage, because

  • since the servers are so reliant on tips they felt they had no other choice than to take

  • the harassment. By eliminating tipping, it would eliminate the chance that these biases

  • could affect the server’s livelihood, and allow customers of any ethnicity, race, and

  • sex to enjoy their dining experience more.

Top 10 Reasons To Abolish the Tipping System in Restaurants

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