|
Send to a friend
Should Tipping Be Voluntary?
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
September 2001
IF NEW DEAL LEGISLATION had been enacted in the 1930s requiring people to tip waiters 15 percent of the total amount of their restaurant bill, we might have been subjected to the following debate today:
Repeal Advocate: Dont you think we ought to repeal the tipping law and let each person decide for himself how much to tip a waiter or, for that matter, whether to tip at all?
Law Advocate: Are you crazy? If the law didnt require people to tip their waiters, no one would tip. Were lucky that President Franklin Roosevelt had the foresight to realize that people cant be trusted with that decision.
Repeal Advocate: But we rely on the free market in other areas of our lives, and it seems to work. For example, we dont force people to fund churches or cancer research, and yet people do so anyway. Why not rely on the free market for tipping?
Law Advocate: The free market is good up to a point, but its not perfect. Government often has to step in to make certain it works. In fact, thats why Congress enacted President Roosevelts tipping law. During the Great Depression, waiters were threatened with starvation. Something had to be done.
Repeal Advocate: Isnt the free market simply a process in which people are trading for mutual gain? Why should government officials be permitted to interfere with that? And Ive never heard of any waiters starving to death in the United States, even during the Depression. Why not simply leave people free to help others on a voluntary basis rather than force them to do so?
Law Advocate: You dont know human nature. You put too much faith in people and the free market. Sometimes government coercion is necessary to make people do the right thing.
Repeal Advocate: Shouldnt a person have the right to decide for himself what to do with his own money?
Law Advocate: Of course, thats what America stands for. But no one is forced to go into a restaurant. All the law says is that if you do eat out, youre going to have to tip your waiter. Anyway, its only 15 percent, and so whats the big deal? The tipping law also ensures that a person is caring and compassionate when he goes out to eat. Whats wrong with that?
Repeal Advocate: How can you consider him caring and compassionate when he is forced to leave a tip? I thought that compassion entailed voluntary, not coerced, action.
Law Advocate: In a democratic society, laws are made by the people. In America, we are the government. Because of our tipping law, youre a better person even if you never go out to eat.
Repeal Advocate: Wouldnt some people give more than 15 percent if the law didnt require them to tip that amount?
Law Advocate: Not likely. Again, you trust people too much. After all, the tipping laws do not prevent people from giving more than the required 15 percent, and yet hardly anyone ever does so.
Repeal Advocate: Dont you think that service would improve if waiters werent guaranteed a tip?
Law Advocate: Youre assuming there would be service. Without FDRs tipping law, there would be no waiters, which means a lot fewer restaurants. Roosevelts New Deal saved not only Americas free-enterprise system but its restaurant business too.
Repeal Advocate: Why not simply leave it to each restaurant to decide whether a tip is required?
Law Advocate: Because those restaurants that didnt require tipping would soon drive out of business those that did. And it wouldnt be long before we had either no restaurants or only self-service ones.
Repeal Advocate: Youve convinced me. Repealing the tipping law is too radical an idea. It might well cause starvation among waiters and closures of restaurants all across the country. Anyway, waiters have a right to a tip. Isnt that what America is all about?
Law Advocate: You bet! And its also what makes us a free and compassionate people. The tipping law isnt perfect, but lets not throw out the baby with the bath water.
| Mr. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation.
|
Send to a friend
back to top
Subscribe to Freedom Daily.
|