In reply to Curtis73 (Forum Supporter) :
8 years waiting tables. My point is not how it IS, it's how it WAS. Tipping in a modern world is a vestige of a tradition that has become so perverted to cover for the fact that we just don't want to pay people a fair wage for their labor. Why have we randomly chosen wait staff as a tipping industry and not auto repair? Why not Electricians? Why not any of the thousands of other professions in which doing a top-notch job should earn you better pay? Why is it that a good roofer or plumber gets paid better because the business is more successful because of their presence, but waiters and bartenders get paid more because the business pays them less and the consumer pays them more?
So how did you do in your 8 years of waiting tables? I assume you made significantly more than minimum wage after tips? You yourself gave an example of how much you made in a good night of tending bar- so isn't this what Toyman has been saying- looking for a solution for a problem that doesn't exist? The answer for why servers are tipped Vs most other professions is easy. Service is subjective. Bringing food to a table is clearly defined. Enhancing the experience of the guest is subjective. People don't care as much about the experience of getting a pipe fixed or having a breaker replaced. They don't want anything to leak, catch on fire, and their utilities to work. It's not as subjective. And since those are skilled jobs, being top notch does affect their pay. Serving is odd in that it doesn't fit neatly into skilled vs. unskilled labor. Bringing a plate to a table is unskilled. Delivering great service is a skill, not everyone can do it. Those that do it better do get paid more- higher tips. Those that can't deliver good service shouldn't be servers. They shouldn't get tipped. Tipping hasn't changed, tipping after the meal has been the norm for decades. It's tipping for poor service that is new.
The person who works at the local grocery store gets paid by the store. If they do exceptional work, they're paid more. Same goes for the DMV agent when I stop in for a title, the Amazon employee who answers my email, and the person who answers my call at the power company. They all have opportunities to shine and provide great service, but I don't tip them.
That's because while they are expected to give good service as part of their job, but it's not a driving factor as to why customers use their services. Your grocery example is ironic. The public has voted with their dollars that they don't need grocery store checkers. Self check to checkers is 10 to 1 in most places now, and that 1 is primarily to check out alcohol. I hated the idea of self checks when they came out- I resisted the idea that I had to do the store's work for them. But it didn't take long to realize that I can do it better than most checkers. I'm faster and bag better. Now I dread when I have to go through the regular line. The other examples don't give you a choice- I can't do those jobs for myself.
Minimum wage hasn't gone up for nearly 15 years, but inflation has. We're woefully behind. The minimum wage over the last 70 years has increased WITH inflation based on what the market needs and supports. Sometimes it doesn't move for a decade or so because the economy doesn't change much, but the last 20 years has been unprecedented in economy growth and change, but the minimum wage has not changed. Back in the 70s when minimum was $1.75, the economy was such that the 1.75 was equivalent to almost $13 today. Somehow the government has most people lulled into forgetting about how minimum wage is a key component of economy.
Where? In many areas minimum wage has grown faster than inflation. Some areas it hasn't. But just looking at minimum wage is not an accurate way to look at wages. That is a big assumption that just because there is a minimum wage, that's what people actually make. If you look at average wages, you will see that wages have gone up. It's also misleading to take the low minimum wage from your state, and compare it with nationwide inflation numbers. While your state has a low minimum wage, it also has a significantly lower cost of living. If you look at all of the low minimum wage states, you will see that they all have the lowest costs of living. Now, it's not clear which is the cause and which is the effect- do the higher minimum wage states have higher wages because of the cost of living, or is the cost of living higher because of the higher wages? I suspect that both are true. You can explore this for yourself. You live in a low wage/low cost of living state bracketed by high wage/high cost of living states. What does the standard of living look like in your state compared to those? If you think their way of doing it is better, you can vote with your feet.