I get that you don't like the principle of having to pay for another person's wages through tipping, but we just don't think about it that way here. If we eliminated the tipping custom, food and drinks would cost 2-3X as much as they do now to make up for the labor costs.
As far as I can tell, tipping only benefits those who receive the tips (if they get good tips) and their employers (who can cheap out on labor costs.) If you're "expected" to shell out an extra 20% to your server, I don't see what difference it makes if it's added to your bill instead.
The notion that food and drinks would cost "2-3X as much" is also pure nonsense. The difference between the full minimum wage and the tipped minimum wage is $5.12 an hour. Assuming a decent server can handle 5 tables an hour (and I'm sure good ones can swing more than that), you're talking about a little over a buck more per table just to bring the server up to minimum wage.
And frankly, it's not realistic to expect to consistently make close to $40 an hour from tips as a server. If you can do that regularly, then you are very, very lucky. A reasonable pay rate for a server, given the difficulty and skills required by the job, would be in the $8-11 range. You're still talking about just a few more bucks added to each table's bill--certainly not 20%, and absolutely not "2-3X as much" as under a tipping regime.
Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to tip well when I get good service, and the only time I don't tip is when I get absolutely awful service, but if you put your livelihood at the direct mercy of your customers, don't bitch when I judge your service to be less valuable than you think it is.
It seems to me like some servers want to have it both ways--they want the good tips but not the crappy ones. Sorry, but you get paid "whatever the market will bear," and in tough times, the market doesn't bear as much. If you want a more stable income, go into a line of work that doesn't rely so much on the kindness of strangers, or fight the eliminate the tipping custom.
I get that you don't like the principle of having to pay for another person's wages through tipping, but we just don't think about it that way here. If we eliminated the tipping custom, food and drinks would cost 2-3X as much as they do now to make up for the labor costs.
I think about it that way, and I wish we could eliminate the custom.
When I go to a restaurant I can't be expected to pay more than what is listed on the menu, everything else is optional IMO.
The notion that food and drinks would cost "2-3X as much" is also pure nonsense. The difference between the full minimum wage and the tipped minimum wage is $5.12 an hour. Assuming a decent server can handle 5 tables an hour (and I'm sure good ones can swing more than that), you're talking about a little over a buck more per table just to bring the server up to minimum wage.
I only bitch about crappy tips when I don't understand them. There have been plenty of times when I am giving a group of people fantastic service and having a really good time with them, and then I look and see a bad tip. It just makes me wonder, "What went wrong?"
Something's gone a little wrong when a bartender or waitress is gettin huffy about only making $25-35 an hour. Plenty of professions (requiring lots of expensive schooling) don't get that, and for a lot more work.
I tried to tip in Italy and had the money returned to me on several occasions. It was impossible for me to get them to keep it until I learned the word for tip. Otherwise, I couldn't explain why I didn't want my change back and they were always confused why I paid a few Euros extra even when I had exact change.
Everything is extremely tightly budgeted, so i dont need this extra shit.
When I go to a restaurant I can't be expected to pay more than what is listed on the menu, everything else is optional IMO.
If you had a contractor build an extension to your house, do you only pay the price of the materials and not the labor?
The thing for me, though, is that I actually enjoy tipping. If somebody gives me good service, I have no problem leaving them a 30-40% tip. Customer service -- GOOD customer service -- isn't easy. But if I go out to dinner and my server gives me good service and ensures that I am having a really good time, I love being able to reward them for it. Waiting tables isn't (or shouldn't be) about just writing down orders and bringing people things. It is also about ensuring that your guests have a fantastic time while they are in your establishment. A lot of servers don't understand that, and I can understand why you might not want to tip them for the mediocre service they provide. I just live in an optimistic world where people take their jobs seriously and strive to do the best they can.
When I go to a restaurant I can't be expected to pay more than what is listed on the menu, everything else is optional IMO.
If you had a contractor build an extension to your house, do you only pay the price of the materials and not the labor?
Getting back to the restaurants, no, I expect the people offering me the meal (read: the restaurant owners) to take care that the costs for every aspect of the meal (the material cost, decent wages (both for the kitchen staff and service), power etc.) is incorporated in the price they offer the meal for. When I tip it is meant as a special bonus for a job well done, not some kind of hidden mandated social security payment.
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