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#681
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Stephen Sprunk wrote:
In the US, I rarely hear of restaurants not passing on tips to waiters, but they _do_ have to take out taxes and report that income to the gov't, whereas it's up to the waiter to report cash tips--and most don't. This can add up to a significant difference in income for a waiter, especially given all the special tax credits and such they can qualify for by not reporting most of their income. I can see you haven't been a waiter for a while! The IRS requires that the restrauant "impute" the cash tips and withhold taxes accordingly. It's up to you to prove the value of the cash tips if you disagree. http://answers.yahoo.com/question/in...5204907AAnoz6r |
#682
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Stephen Sprunk wrote:
The discussion above was obviously about _cash_ tips, which are an entirely different matter. The employer (and therefore the IRS) only knows what the employee _reports_, not what they actually _received_. Doesn't wotk that way dude. The employer knows the ticket total for the waiter and imputes an assumed tip witholding based on the sales total. The employee doesn't have to report a thing. |
#683
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In message , at 21:48:37 on Wed, 29 Feb
2012, Adam H. Kerman remarked: Tipping in restaurants is largely optional here in Britain and the amount is completely up the patron's discretion. Do your restaurants pay much higher straight wages than US restaurants do? In the US, it's largely understood that the waiter is compensated in part by the restaurant through straight wages and in part by the customer. In smaller restaurants, including pubs (bars), the waiting staff are often the proprietors or their relations, so the manner in which they are paid isn't really the concern of the customer. If you want to leave a tip it's more for the establishment than the waiter. Paying individuals for the service you'd expect to get anyway feels a little like bribery. I know it's different in the USA, and waiters there are more likely to be assigned to tables and customers, rather than there being a pool of waiters and a pool of tables all 'belonging to' the establishment. -- Roland Perry |
#684
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Neil Williams wrote:
I've seen them used on trains (in the buffet car mainly), but more common is an integrated ticket and payment machine. Traditionally the railway did not pre-authorise at all (at their risk) but with on-train Wi-Fi and mobile phone based devices this is likely to change. That's very interesting. However, couldn't these devices be loaded with lists of invalid and canceled credit card numbers? |
#685
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Roland Perry wrote:
at 21:48:37 on Wed, 29 Feb 2012, Adam H. Kerman remarked: Tipping in restaurants is largely optional here in Britain and the amount is completely up the patron's discretion. Do your restaurants pay much higher straight wages than US restaurants do? In the US, it's largely understood that the waiter is compensated in part by the restaurant through straight wages and in part by the customer. In smaller restaurants, including pubs (bars), the waiting staff are often the proprietors or their relations, so the manner in which they are paid isn't really the concern of the customer. If you want to leave a tip it's more for the establishment than the waiter. Paying individuals for the service you'd expect to get anyway feels a little like bribery. I know it's different in the USA, and waiters there are more likely to be assigned to tables and customers, rather than there being a pool of waiters and a pool of tables all 'belonging to' the establishment. It depends on the restaurant. In some restaurants, yes, the waiter who takes the order brings the food and, later, the check. If the meal is elaborate, he might be assisted by one or more busboys when serving. In other restaurants, whoever is free takes the order, brings food, then brings the check. It might be three different people. One Chinese restaurant I eat at many times each year does that. They are really good about bringing the food to the table the moment it's plated in the kitchen so it's nice and hot. In this style, all tips are pooled among everyone working the shift. We have restaurants in which the customer orders food at the counter, and then carries his own food to the table when it's ready. Sometimes, the clerks put out tip jars. I ignore them, given that I'm serving myself. Now, buffet-style restaurants are a little different. If I see the staff keeping the buffet well stocked and removing the unserved food that's been sitting out too long, I leave a tip. Those people are working hard to provide good service. If the buffet isn't looked after, I don't tip and I probably wouldn't eat there again. I like being able to reward good service. On those rare occassions in which the waiter was horrid, I've left a single coin. You have to leave something so the waiter doesn't assume that the diner just forgot. We also have the owners of barbershops who expect to be tipped. If the barber owns the shop, you're not supposed to tip, but he's trying to extract more money from his customers. If the barber is just renting the chair, then you're supposed to tip. Do you have tradesmen who insist that they are professionals, and insist that their customers are clients? That annoys me. Ancient joke: Only lawyers and prostitutes have clients. |
#686
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On 01-Mar-12 08:40, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
Neil Williams wrote: I've seen them used on trains (in the buffet car mainly), but more common is an integrated ticket and payment machine. Traditionally the railway did not pre-authorise at all (at their risk) but with on-train Wi-Fi and mobile phone based devices this is likely to change. That's very interesting. However, couldn't these devices be loaded with lists of invalid and canceled credit card numbers? Before the advent of telephone authorization, credit card companies would send merchants small books each month listing all of the invalid and/or canceled cards that had not yet expired. However, even by the 1980s, this proved impractical--and the number of cards circulating today is at least two or three orders of magnitude greater. Also note that many consumers today have _valid_ cards with little/no available credit, so it's not sufficient anyway if a merchant wants to ensure their transaction will be accepted. S -- Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking |
#687
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Stephen Sprunk wrote:
On 01-Mar-12 08:40, Adam H. Kerman wrote: Neil Williams wrote: I've seen them used on trains (in the buffet car mainly), but more common is an integrated ticket and payment machine. Traditionally the railway did not pre-authorise at all (at their risk) but with on-train Wi-Fi and mobile phone based devices this is likely to change. That's very interesting. However, couldn't these devices be loaded with lists of invalid and canceled credit card numbers? Before the advent of telephone authorization, credit card companies would send merchants small books each month listing all of the invalid and/or canceled cards that had not yet expired. I recall using these books, yes. Also note that many consumers today have _valid_ cards with little/no available credit, so it's not sufficient anyway if a merchant wants to ensure their transaction will be accepted. No one would care on suburban/commuter railway, since the discussion drifted back on topic, where the only concern is if fare collection in aggregate is improved and cost of fare collection is lowered. In intercity train travel, well, you assume that the traveler has available credit, as it's difficult to travel without credit cards. |
#688
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On Feb 29, 3:57*am, Roland Perry wrote:
What would Amazon use in the USA if you bought a book for say $10? U.S. Post Office; and they use them for larger orders, too. Many mail order businesses charge very high 'fees' for 'postage and handling'. |
#689
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On Feb 29, 10:47*am, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
The link for tracking the shipment reveals that it was actually sent via FedEx Smartpost®, an interesting hybrid system in which FedEx delivers the package to the local post office and USPS does the final delivery to the customer. The old Western Union Telegraph Company had that arrangement for a number of years, the service was called Mailgram. The message was sent to a printer at a local post office and it was delivered by regular mail. Much cheaper than a regular telegram, though more expensive that regular letters. Industries used it to recall laid off workers. |
#690
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On Feb 29, 10:51*am, Roland Perry wrote:
In my experience, standard shipping for a $10 book might be $2, two day service might be $10 and overnight might be $15. Which of those are tracked or signed-for? If it's sent by US Post Office, it is not signed for. If it's sent by United Parcel Service, it varies on whether a signature is required--basically depending on the quality of the neighborhood. If you're not home and you get a package (or letter) that requires a signature, it's a lot easier with the Post Office as you go local. With UPS, it may be cumbersome. |
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