yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Tipping Says a Lot About You (and Your Culture) | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 4, 2024

When you look at the idea of money, so much of it is given by the norms and the rituals of a society. Look at America, and when you go out to eat with your friends, how much do you tip when you go to dinner? Well, maybe it's ten, maybe it's 15 percent, but did you know that if you're seated outside on a nice sunny day you're more likely to tip more money because the sun put you in a better mood? But if you're seated inside or if it's an overcast day, you may tip less money.

So the whole confusion of how much to tip, you're not actually the one making the decision; it's your subconscious that's making that decision for you. So Americans tip is a cultural norm. And so, as you go across the emerging world and other developed countries, people tip at different levels, and that line of what to tip really reveals not just how much they value the service, but what's acceptable in terms of the gift economy, what's acceptable in terms of not too tipping too much.

It reveals a lot about how people perceive money and obligation in countries around the world. I know in some places, when you give too big a tip, it implies that you're trying to shame the person, saying like, "Listen, I'm giving you so much money, shame on you for not treating me better." In some Native American communities, for example, they have a practice called a potlatch.

And you would have a potlatch when there is a new king or new queen or new chief, and they would invite other friends and then they would start giving out all their goods, all these riches to their friends. It was called a potlatch, and they're basically shaming people by lavishing them with riches, as to say, "I'm so rich, I'm so affluent I don't even need this money." And so, as you go into tipping culture, sometimes the biggest insult you can give is too big of a tip.

More Articles

View All
A Crash Course in Guyanese Cuisine | Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted
This is Georgetown, the Catholic Guyana, a tiny South American country that sits right on the edge of that mighty Amazon jungle. Located on the northern edge of South America, this English-speaking nation is made up of thousands of square miles of untame…
Gordon Ramsay Goes Cast Net Fishing in Laos | Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted
First of all, an absolute pleasure because you’ve helped put Lao cuisine on the map. I’m dying to get to understand Lao cuisine. Food not too sweet, but we use lots of stuff that we get from the forest or swimming river. We also use more herbs. Wow, that…
AI Can Literally Lend You a Hand #kurzgesagt #shorts
AI can literally lend you a hand, but hands are complicated. If your hand were a video game character, you’d need 27 buttons to control it. Millions of possible button combinations need to be translated to a robotic hand in real time, with as little delay…
Billionaire Warren Buffett: HOW to calculate the INTRINSIC VALUE of a STOCK
Actually, it’s very simple. The first investment primer—when would you guess it was written? The first investment primer that I know of, and it was pretty good advice, was delivered in about 600 BC by Aesop. And Aesop, you’ll remember, said, “A bird in th…
Stock Buyback Scams
Some finance junkies are thinking, and what about stock buybacks? Public companies have returned hundreds of billions of dollars to investors through buybacks. The critical word that is missing from their vocabulary and calculation is dilution: the additi…
Understanding decimal multiplication
We’re told that Sydney knows that 427 * 23 is equal to 9,821. Use this understanding to help Sydney solve 42.7 times 2.3. So pause this video and think about what you think it’s going to be. All right, now let’s do this together. You might realize that 4…