No-tip restaurants gaining few fans
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April 6, 2016
There aren’t many issues on which edgy Momofuku chef/owner David Chang and a Koch brothers-funded conservative think tank would see eye-to-eye. But the no-tipping movement is one of them. Both voice concern that changes to waitstaff compensation schemes triggered by $15 an hour minimum wage mandates could have a detrimental effect on restaurant economics, particularly at mid-sized operations.
The outspoken Chang made his remarks in an hour-long podcast downloadable here: The content is also summarized on Eater.
Chang has nearly 1,000 employees on the payroll across his Momofuku empire. He has banned tipping at just one of his restaurants, the new Nishi in Manhattan, setting menu prices high and paying hourly rates that translate to a living wage for both the front and back of the house.
He’s of two minds about the value of no-tip schemes and $15 an hour minimum wage mandates.
“Socially and politically I'm pretty damn liberal,” he says. “Socially—I wouldn't say I'm a socialist but I'm behind everything we're doing, what the government's doing (raising the minimum wage) I would also want. But as a business owner, it doesn't make any f***ing sense....It's painting us in a corner and there's no room to grow.