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The Give and Take on Restaurant Tipping

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Date

2003-09-17

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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