My understanding is that if the employees in question do not make up the rest of the minimum wage with tips, then the employers have to make up the difference. I'm not sure if that is correct, just something I heard somewhere.jackknife402 said:Yeah, there's a national minimum here as well. But there's two of them, one for normal businesses and companies, another for ones where there is a chance the people will get tipped. The tip one is much lower, however the minimum wage for normal companies is still so low that unless you live in a shack and eat porridge day after day for sustenance, you can't live off of it.Flames66 said:Where I am from serving staff are not treated as slaves. There is a national minimum wage and companies have to stick to it. I might consider tipping if whoever is serving me goes above and beyond what they are already paid for, but with the extortionate prices most eating establishments charge that is unlikely.jackknife402 said:you do understand that most of these people are not paid well. In fact, the majority of food industry workers(some chefs included) have their tips factored in as their actual wages. So the employer just pays the minimum possible(which I think is about 2.50-3.50 american an hour here in the US.) and tips are supposed to suppliment this.Flames66 said:I do not tip. I am not giving someone more money for something that they are already paid to do.
There some places where only the management team is paid well, and the way other employees get livable income in they pool all the tips at the end of the night and split it up.
So no, they are not paid to do their jobs because they are barely paid at all. You are a horrible person for not being generous and I hope you burn for it. (I worked in a place for two years that we were only paid 3.75 for an hour and relied solely on tips for any sort of livable income.)
I myself tip between 10 and 20 percent. Normally it's 20 however if the service is terrible, I will cut my tip in half. I've also been known to increase tip sizes when others whom were responsible to tip barely even place down five percent.
And frankly that's frog shit. In Australia, tipping is a rather foreign concept as a rule since our minimum wage laws as a rule don't allow for things like tips to lower it as far as I am aware. Some places keep a coin bowl/jar at the counter and they use that for the Christmas booze up, something most Aussies are happy to tip in a buck or two for but we don't rely on tips to balance our wages.jackknife402 said:Yeah, there's a national minimum here as well. But there's two of them, one for normal businesses and companies, another for ones where there is a chance the people will get tipped. The tip one is much lower, however the minimum wage for normal companies is still so low that unless you live in a shack and eat porridge day after day for sustenance, you can't live off of it.Flames66 said:Where I am from serving staff are not treated as slaves. There is a national minimum wage and companies have to stick to it. I might consider tipping if whoever is serving me goes above and beyond what they are already paid for, but with the extortionate prices most eating establishments charge that is unlikely.jackknife402 said:you do understand that most of these people are not paid well. In fact, the majority of food industry workers(some chefs included) have their tips factored in as their actual wages. So the employer just pays the minimum possible(which I think is about 2.50-3.50 american an hour here in the US.) and tips are supposed to suppliment this.Flames66 said:I do not tip. I am not giving someone more money for something that they are already paid to do.
There some places where only the management team is paid well, and the way other employees get livable income in they pool all the tips at the end of the night and split it up.
So no, they are not paid to do their jobs because they are barely paid at all. You are a horrible person for not being generous and I hope you burn for it. (I worked in a place for two years that we were only paid 3.75 for an hour and relied solely on tips for any sort of livable income.)
I myself tip between 10 and 20 percent. Normally it's 20 however if the service is terrible, I will cut my tip in half. I've also been known to increase tip sizes when others whom were responsible to tip barely even place down five percent.
Yep, that's exactly how it works. Restaurant servers usually make about $2.15 per hour where I live (which according to google is about £1.32) as their base pay. All of their other income is solely from tips.Boundless Apathy said:What is the actual deal with tipping i mean here in Britain they get paid a wage to do that job. i've heard its something like they get paid a pittance and have to live of off tips to survive thus promoting good service to get better tips?
The little patch of nowhere outside of Flint, MI. Most pizza places won't deliver here and whenever I tip the people from the one place who does drive out here they always have this look of surprise as if it's not normal. Then again it could be a safety measure like in Detroit if you deliver pizzas you should carry a gun since people know you get tips are more likely to mug you.00slash00 said:where exactly in america do you live? i live in pennsylvania and while you dont technically HAVE to tip, its a pretty big dick move if you dont. and $5? depends on how much you ordered. i mean if i order $20 worth of food, ill tip around 4 or 5, but i would not consider $5 to be a lot, if you order a lot of food. i mean if you order like $50 worth of food, i would hope you would tip more than 5TehCookie said:Where I live (in America) you don't have to tip pizza deliveries, or if you do $5 is considered a lot. Then again when my brother worked in the city as one he always got large tips so I guess it all depends on where you live.
I try to average about 15%. I go up to 20% for good service, and as low as 5% for bad service.rancher of monsters said:So how much do you tip Escapsit, should I feel cheap?