ukstitch
<font color=deeppink>I'm not sure I'm quite your a
- Joined
- May 5, 2008
- Messages
- 5,487
I read that tipping is expected more in the US where waiting staff can be paid only a few dollars an hour. In the UK waiting staff should be protected by the minimum wage, so tipping is not essential to make their wages up. They proabably earn as much as the person who stacks the shelf in Tesco - and I certainly don't tip them.![]()
I personally do tip unless service was abysmal (never happened in DLRP) but I wouldn't be too worried if your mum doesn't believe in it, PJ. I would think the labour laws in France are as good as ours and staff should be on a minimum wage. As Bob noticed, the staff often look surprised to get a tip, so either they are good actors or they genuinely don't expect it.
You're right - many US jobs are paid a low wage with tips expected to make up the difference. In the US, tipping is expected for almost everything - Bell boys, waiters, taxi drivers, cinema attendants - you name it and a tip is usually expected. It's so common in the US that you're almost considered rude if you don't tip.
Personally, I don't like this approach, because I feel a tip should be a bonus reward, rather than the normal. From the point of my US trip, I have to be careful with my tipping because we don't have a formal policy for tip related expenses (as they aren't recorded on an official receipt), so unless I can justify it every time I tip, then that comes out of my own pocket, even if it was a tip for a work related taxi trip for example. That's fine when I've had good service and personally want to tip, but it's more awkward when I've tipped because I feel I have to.
I've just found this. I'd thought I'd read somewhere that there was a service charge added in France but as I'd never seen it on the end of any bill thought I'd got it wrong.
Indeed, although I've never noticed the note at the end of the bill in DLRP...