Showing posts with label 2/3 of people don't tip food delivery people. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2/3 of people don't tip food delivery people. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Do you tip the people who deliver your food?


Over the summer a New York Times reporter - Andy Newman - took a job for DoorDash delivering food to explore what life is like for people in the gig economy.

Among the things he discovered was the fact that DoorDash steals its employees tips.  There was such an uproar after the article ran that DoorDash changed their policy to include more transparency. But they're not the only ones guilty of this practice.  (Vincent, 2019)

And, after a brief flurry of articles in 2018, I don't see anyone talking anymore about the fact that using Seamless may drive your favorite restaurant out of business.  (Dunn, 2018)

But back to tipping.  Andy reported that for almost 2/3 of his 43 deliveries he got no tip at all.  Wow.  I guess people don't realize that workers are dependent upon those tips to make a living wage.  It's just like in restaurants where the minimum wage for servers is $2.13 an hour versus $7.25 for non-tipped positions.  They are counting on tips to make up the difference so they can survive.

The article went on to say that "People in public housing tipped consistently, while students at NYU rarely did." (Newman, 2019)

Why do you think this is?  Why do people in public housing tip consistently?  Why don't NYU students tip?  How does this relate to our discussions about tribes?  And to the happiness studies with regard to giving?


Vincent, J. (2019, July 22)  Delivery apps like DoorDash are using your tips to pay workers' wages.  theverge.com.  Retrieved October 2, 2019, from

Dunn, E. (2018, February 3)  How Delivery Apps May Put Your Favorite Restaurant Out Of Business.  newyorker.com.  Retrieved October 2, 2019, from

Newman, A. (2019, July 21)  What Our Reporter Learned Delivering Burritos to New Yorkers.  nytimes.com.  Retrieved October 2, 2019, from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/21/reader-center/insider-reporter-food-deliveryman.html