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Opinion: The future of tipping should be driven by Canadians, not businesses

The future of tipping should be defined by Canadians, not businesses seeking to shift responsibility for worker compensation onto consumers.
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One reason why tipping garners so much interest is that it reshapes the relationship between workers and their managers, and workers and consumers. In doing so, it has wide-ranging effects on workers.

Tipping has long been a source of , spilling over from time to time into the . Canadians’ views on tipping remain divided, as by researchers from Dalhousie University has found.

One reason why tipping garners so much interest is that it between workers and their managers, and workers and consumers. In doing so, it has wide-ranging effects on workers.

On the one hand, tipping can boost workers’ income and give workers a . On the other, more problematic, hand it often comes with a range of negative outcomes that are not always apparent to consumers.

These include , pressure to engage in , among different groups of workers, and .

Tipping , including exacerbating class distinctions and legitimizing other employment practices like that can be harmful to workers. Clearly, tipping is neither a neutral or trivial activity.

A shifting landscape

Tipping , in which 13 per cent of Canadians are reported to have worked in 2021.

Tipping is spreading to more and more parts of the hospitality industry, including . Soon, it might even spread to , and .

These changes are taking place before our eyes without any serious policy debate or direction. When tipping does receive policy attention, it is often limited to , and adapting laws around .

While these are important topics, these efforts fail to tackle the complex issues and trade-offs associated with tipping in a comprehensive manner. They represent a missed opportunity to start a conversation we need to have as a society. Instead, it is businesses that are often in the driver’s seat.

While some businesses, including and , have tried to eliminate tipping, more commonly they have amplified it by . Businesses have many reasons to do this, notably the opportunity to cut costs by shifting some of the .

Once tipping starts to become more common in a particular industry, strong that are hard to break. If this pattern holds in industries where tipping is spreading in Canada, millions more Canadian workers could see their working lives significantly altered.

It’s time for a serious conversation

In light of these trends and our current knowledge of the impacts of tipping, we should pause and ask ourselves: is this really want we want the future of work to look like in Canada?

As a business and sustainability professor, I argue that it is time for Canadians, their representatives and policy-makers to have a serious conversation about the future of compensation in Canada and what role, if any, tipping ought to play in it.

This conversation should include a thorough consideration of pros and cons of tipping and its alternatives, like , and the supporting practices needed to successfully transition from one approach to another.

It should also provide opportunities for Canadian workers to learn and deliberate together by accessing expert insights, research and stakeholder perspectives, like those of and the .

We could take inspiration from the recent work of the , which leveraged extensive stakeholder consultations and research when drafting its report on the future of work in Ontario. We could also draw on the growing number of that are tackling issues like and .

The future of tipping

Canadians may ultimately express a desire for the elimination of tipping, at least in some sectors, as was the case . This could be coupled with policies to give workers some of the benefits tipping can have, namely higher wages and a greater sense of control by giving workers more .

Alternatively, Canadians may want to keep the practice of tipping, but implement clear rules about , higher wages for workers and transparency about how tips are distributed and whether any tipped minimum wages apply to workers.

Rather than tipping being largely determined by businesses as they tinker with payment portals, it should be defined by Canadians who, though they may experience tipping on a regular basis, have not been given the chance to properly reflect on it.

This will become all the more important as the pandemic draws our attention to the importance of creating an economy that offers .

The Conversation

Simon Pek receives funding from the University of Victoria's President's Chair award.