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by lmm
5020 days ago
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>If you are staying at a hotel were the staff was paid above minimum wage, would you feel more secure? Yes. Seriously, is that even a question? Wouldn't you? Higher wages mean two things: the staff have more to lose by being fired, and by implication the hotel puts more effort into its staff. Which means they're probably recruiting more carefully and putting more effort into staff loyalty once they're there. |
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I don't think wages affect honesty to any great extent, no. I think bad working conditions affect honesty a lot more.
If you believe this to be true, do you ask the hotel how much they pay their cleaning staff, and choose the one with higher base pay? How much more are you willing to pay to be in a hotel which pays their employees a higher wage?
Higher wages mean other things than those two. It could mean that it's harder to get staff because there is better employment elsewhere, so there's less risk to being fired for suspicion of theft because it's not hard to find a new job. It could be because the union is strong and able to negotiate better than management, while management actively wants to break the union by treating their cleaning staff poorly in the hopes that the staff will steal, so management has reason to fire them and blame the union for protecting thieves.
(Yes, the latter sound much less likely than the former.)