The Give and Take on Restaurant Tipping

TR Number

Date

2003-09-17

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Virginia Tech

Abstract

This dissertation examines aspects of both the consumer (the "give") and the server (the "take") sides of restaurant tipping. On the consumer side, I address both why, and how much, people tip in restaurants. I also examine a policy issue related to the recent Supreme Court decision in United States v. Fior d'Italia. These issues are addressed via a combination of theoretical, empirical, and experimental analysis.

On the server side, I use survey data collected from several restaurants to address the issue of labor market discrimination based on beauty. Specifically, do more attractive servers earn higher tips than less attractive servers? I argue that a tipping data set offers several advantages over data sets used in previous studies of the beauty wage gap.

This dissertation was funded by a National Science Foundation Dissertation Enhancement Grant (NSF #427347).

Description

Keywords

wage gap, beauty, attractiveness, social norms, tipping

Citation