Freakonomics Radio - Is It Okay for Restaurants to Racially Profile Their Employees? (Rebroadcast)
Episode Date: August 4, 2016We seem to have decided that ethnic food tastes better when it's served by people of that ethnicity (or at least something close). Does this make sense -- and is it legal? ...
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Hey, podcast listeners, this is Stephen Dubner. It's August, and we here at Freakonomics Radio get really busy this time of year.
And so we are bringing you an episode from our archives. It's called, Is it OK for restaurants to racially profile their employees?
Hope you enjoy it.
We will be back next week with a brand new episode of Freakonomics Radio.
Hey, Levitt, pretend for a minute that you've decided to open up a restaurant.
Can you imagine that?
Sure. Easy. Easy to imagine something like that.
Would you enjoy it?
No, I would hate it more than anything.
But you can imagine. You can at least imagine.
I can imagine. Yeah.
What kind of food would you serve?
Probably fast food, because it's my favorite kind of food.
I think that's what I would probably open.
Could you imagine opening something with an Asian cuisine?
There's a really great Asian restaurant in the basement of LaGuardia Airport.
I could open one of those.
Do you know what I'm talking about?
You've eaten there with me. I've made one of those. Do you know what I'm talking about? You've eaten there with me.
I've made you eat there.
Oh, yeah.
That's kind of fast food.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, exactly.
Fast food Asian.
The sweet and sour chicken.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right.
Bourbon chicken.
Bourbon chicken.
Bourbon chicken.
That's what it is, the bourbon chicken.
Okay, so you would open an airport fast food Chinese restaurant would be your heart's desire.
And let me ask you this.
How do you think you would approach hiring the waitstaff of this Chinese fast food airport restaurant?
Do you want them to match the food in some way?
Absolutely.
Why is that?
When it comes to ethnic food, I'm not sure why,
but we've decided that it tastes better when it's served by people of that ethnicity.
I'm guessing you may have noticed this too.
We certainly have in my family.
My son Solomon noticed it a few years ago when he was like 10.
I have some friends, New Yorkers, who lived in Japan for several years, learned the language, and then moved back to New York. And for one of their first meals back, they went to an authentic Japanese restaurant and they started talking to the waiter in Japanese.
But he did not know a word of Japanese because he was
Korean. The other waiters there were Vietnamese, Filipino, Chinese. What is going on here?
That was a question put to us by one of our listeners.
Hey Freakonomics Radio, this is Bailey Hicken out of Salt Lake City, Utah,
and I have a question for you guys. I was at dinner last night having sushi,
and I had this realization that every worker at every sushi restaurant that I've ever been to
is Asian, or at least Asian-ish looking. So is it a prerequisite that you have to be Asian-looking
to work at a sushi restaurant? And if it is, can they do that?
Bailey explained a bit further in an email.
She wrote, if someone wanted to hire all white or American-looking people at, let's say, some very Americanized restaurant,
then people would be pissed.
Or all black, all women, all gay, whatever, really.
How do the Asians get away with it, she wrote.
Let it be noted that my grandpa is Japanese, so I am a quarter, and I love the Asians.
So maybe you guys could look into it for me.
Maybe it could be a podcast one day.
Who knows? A girl can dream, right?
Yes, Bailey, a girl can dream.
And we will dream right along with you.
We will try to figure out where this restaurant racial profiling comes from,
if it makes sense, if
it's legal.
And of course, we should know it's not only Asian restaurants we're talking about here.
We're talking about restaurants that make Indian food served by people from Pakistan
and Bangladesh, Italian food served by Croatian or Serbian waitstaff, and Mexican food, too.
Speaking of which, hey, what's your favorite
Mexican dish? I love the
chimichanga.
From WNYC Studios, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
Neither Steve Levitt nor I have ever run a restaurant.
So to try to figure out the ethnic hiring patterns at restaurants,
I thought we'd start with some people who actually do run a restaurant.
Or two.
Okay, we're in the kitchen.
I'm seeing some charred red peppers.
This is the enchilada station and the quesadilla station.
That's Nat Milner. And this is his wife, Liz O. Milner.
This kitchen smells amazing.
Liz and Nat own and operate two restaurants in Manhattan on the Upper West Side,
pretty close to where I live, as it turns out.
And as it turns out, my family and I really like both their restaurants.
One is called Elizabeth's Neighborhood Table, named after Liz.
It calls its
cuisine thoughtful American comfort food. And right next door is Gabriela's Restaurant and Tequila Bar.
That's where we are now. You want to walk us through here the kitchen quickly?
Gabriela's, as you've probably figured out by now, is a Mexican restaurant.
This is Rita. Rita's in charge of everything. She makes the sauces, the mole.
This is the homemade corn tortillas being made right here. It's a real old school metal press.
You just put a ball of dough in there, flatten it out, and throw it on the hot grill.
Nat Milner comes from a real New York restaurant family. His uncle, Arthur Cutler, was a pioneer,
a Jewish guy on Long Island,
who figured out that what New York really needed was a big, noisy, family-style Italian place
called Carmine's
and a Chinatown-style noodle shop
with roast meats called Ollie's
and Virgil's, a Southern-style barbecue joint
in Times Square,
back when Times Square was really Times Square,
Arthur Cutler liked to zig when everybody else was zagging,
as I learned from his nephew Nat.
So, okay, so let's go back to the beginning of Gabriella's.
First of all, who was Gabriella, the person?
Well, Gabriella worked for my uncle,
and she would have been helping out with my cousin
and cooking meals once in a while,
and my uncle would come home and say, say, holy cow, this food is great.
What is this?
It was like the late 80s, early 90s, and everything was Tex-Mex.
And Gabriela was like, I don't know.
This is just what I cook at home.
She's Mexican, Gabriela?
Yeah.
Gabriela Hernandez.
So it was kind of home-style, fresh Mexican.
What part of Mexico is she from?
Guadalajara.
Uh-huh.
Okay. Homestyle, fresh Mexican. What part of Mexico is she from? Guadalajara. Uh-huh, okay.
And so your uncle says,
hey, we should open a restaurant featuring your food.
That's the way it worked?
That's, yeah, yeah, basically.
She brought up, her whole family came into the business.
No kidding.
Her uncle was the original chef.
He came up with all the, Hector came up with all the recipes
and designed the whole menu and put it all together.
So when we call Gabriela's a Mexican restaurant, it really is pretty Mexican.
The moles, the ceviches, the chimichangas.
Arthur Cutler, Nat's uncle, the restaurant pioneer, he died young in 1997.
Nat was living in Alaska, where he'd gone to hang out, fish salmon.
And that's where he met Liz.
She's from Boston.
She went to Alaska as a Jesuit volunteer.
By now, they'd fallen in love, married, had a kid.
And when Nat's uncle died and Nat heard the family could use some help in their restaurants back in New York,
Nat and Liz moved back, and Nat wound up running Gabriela's.
The food today is pretty much the same as it was
at the beginning. The recipes are authentic Mexican. The vibe is Mexican-ish. The tequila
is most definitely Mexican. Nat and Liz regularly go to Mexico to taste tequila from the barrels
to decide which batch to bring back to Gabriela's. Should we be drinking some while we talk?
We could. It's almost time.
We have our own select barrels here.
They'd be perfect breakfast tequila.
Do you really? Is there a breakfast tequila?
We can make something up.
Nat showed me a selection of Blanco tequilas,
that's clear, unaged tequila,
and then some Reposados.
Those are the darker ones that have aged in barrels
for less than a year,
and some Añejos, which have aged longer.
So this is a 364-day reposado.
Tequila tasting, according to Nat Milner, is a lot like wine tasting.
We wafted, we sniffed.
You want to give it a little swirl, tip it on the side, and smell it way over the top of the glass.
And then, just before noon, we drank.
Cheers.
Cheers. Mmm, delicious. So good.
Yeah, it's kind of yummy, huh?
Fantastic.
So that's quite a bit of authenticity for a Mexican restaurant in New York.
What about the people who work there?
So, in a given, let's say, busy shift, I don't know,
a Thursday night, Friday night, Saturday night,
obviously get really busy.
How many front of room workers do you have here?
We'll have, on a real busy night in the summer,
we'll have about 10 servers on.
10 servers, okay.
Is that waitresses, waiters, or is that different?
Waiters and waiters.
Okay, and then?
And then bussers and runners and bartenders and barbacks and all the kitchen staff.
Okay. All in front of the room, front of the house on a Friday night, let's say, would be then 20, 25 people?
Yeah, that sounds about right.
Okay. How many of them are Mexican?
Well, I don't really have the breakdown.
You don't have the papers in front of you.
Yeah, but no, I mean, I would say probably 40%.
Oh, is that right?
But everyone's pretty much Latin.
Everyone speaks Spanish.
A lot of people are from Colombia, Ecuador, Dominican Republic.
Does it matter that a server might be Dominican serving Mexican food, in your view?
I don't think that matters.
Yeah, right.
But how many non-Latinos do you have in front of the house?
Very few.
Why so few non-Latinos in a Mexican restaurant?
Does this come from the supply side, the restaurant, or the demand side, the customers?
As Nat talked me through it, he pointed out that he doesn't actually do the hiring.
The general manager does.
And he is from Mexico. You have a corporate culture, right? And you have a group of people and you're trying to grow a team. And, you know, you put out ads, a lot of ads go in
Spanish newspapers or especially for the back of the house, the front of the house. We tend to
always have a good selection of people who want to work. And, you know, we don't really advertise the jobs.
They kind of come to you through other people who are working here.
Gotcha.
And, you know, we have sisters and brothers and cousins and extended families working throughout the whole.
I assume they're mostly then speaking Spanish to each other on the job?
Mostly, yeah.
Gotcha.
Especially in the back.
Especially in the back, right.
So the back is all Latino as well?
Mm-hmm.
Gotcha.
Okay, so what if I, however, I'm 25 years old, I just moved to New York from Pennsylvania, and I happen to be
white, and I'm looking for a waiter job or waitress job, and I come to you guys, like I... We would
hire you, for sure. You would? Yeah, you want a job? I do not, actually. At this moment, I do not.
Although I could be your tequila taster. I think I'd be good at that. We honestly don't get a lot
of people like that walking in.
Yeah. So that's what I want to know is how it works. So is it a kind of self-selection
in terms of the hiring and the applying?
In that sense? Yeah. I mean, like back in the day, you could be 16, 17, 18 years old,
looking for a job as a busboy. Now those jobs just aren't there because you have adults who
want those jobs. Like even paper boys are now adults.
Yeah. I mean, you have people who, you know, why would I have a 17-year-old working here
when I can have a 28-year-old man who has a baby
and is trying to support his family?
Now let me ask you this.
For the people who come here to eat,
do you think they care that the front of the house is all Latino
in terms of making it kind of the right experience,
whether that's about authenticity or whatnot?
I think there's a little aspect of that,
but I don't give it much credence.
Yeah, yeah.
It might be a little bit.
I know that when you walk into Gabriella's,
you don't want to see me.
I mean...
Why? I mean, I don't mind seeing you.
I know, but you're looking to see Gabriella, right?
I have red curly hair't mind seeing you. I know, but you're looking to see Gabriela, right? Yeah.
I have red curly hair and a red beard.
I mean, I think there's something to say about that.
I mean, that people want to come to a Mexican restaurant and be surrounded by Spanish-speaking people.
Yeah.
With dark hair.
Right.
Yeah.
For one, I feel like the pace, the way things move here.
I know we've had some people come in who are not Latino, but they'll be here, but they don't stay long.
I think it's just one of those things where it's moving fast.
You're in the kitchen.
You're speaking Spanish.
It's because of the language barrier.
You understand the food.
You're excited about the food.
If you come to work here and you don't speak Spanish
and you don't fit in with the culture of the family meal
and eating with people and laughing with people,
you kind of feel like you're a little bit outside of it.
I even feel that when I'm walking around, but I just muscle through.
But what about restaurants that serve Asian cuisine?
Why would a Japanese-style sushi restaurant hire waitstaff who are Korean, Vietnamese, Filipino?
Well, I think it goes back to the same thing about who walks in the door looking for these jobs.
You know, if I'm Asian, I'm not going to go to a Mexican restaurant and say, you know, can I get a job here?
I mean, you might.
And, you know, we hire all kinds of people.
But, you know, you might rather go to an Asian restaurant and feel a little more.
I don't have a good answer for that.
But I think a lot of the people who are coming here are the first generation.
They're just here, they're trying to work their butts off,
they're trying to make something, and there's some truth to that.
That's interesting.
So the work ethic of the immigrant or maybe the first generation American
coincides well with the needs of a restaurant that happens to be an ethnic restaurant, right?
I mean, so that might be one reason why the hiring kind of self-selects itself like that.
Yeah, I would think it's got something to do with it.
You know, I will also say, like, you know, you're talking about the 25-year-old kid who's coming to New York City and he's trying to make something and he's trying to get a job.
He's not coming to New York to be a waiter.
He can do that in Omaha, right? Right. and he's trying to make something and he's trying to get a job. He's not coming to New York to be a waiter.
He can do that in Omaha, right?
Right.
So he's coming here to do something else, whatever that might be.
It's like that TV show Taxi, right?
None of them are really taxi drivers except for Alex, right?
Everyone was an actor, one was a boxer, one was a comedian, whatever.
It's the same kind of thing. So if he's sitting here and I have someone who's more of a, you know, sees the restaurant industry as a career.
Right.
You know, I would certainly think of them over someone who's, you know, maybe going to be here three months and then get a show on Broadway and disappear or whatever.
Yeah.
And that is a problem that Nat and Liz have had at their other restaurant, Elizabeth's Neighborhood Table.
From the street, the two restaurants are just next door.
But from the back, through the kitchen at Gabriela's,
you see they're actually attached.
And we have a secret back door over here.
And just like that, you go from a kitchen producing guacamole and ceviche
to a kitchen with pancakes and eggs on the griddle.
Elizabeth's does a big brunch business with the Classics. They have a great corned beef, by the way. Lunch and dinner bring creative salads and
comfort foods like turkey meatloaf and grass-fed burgers. We have wonderful soups. I'm not even
sure what soups we have today. Oh, that's my corned beef. Now, I'm excited to see a can of Pam in your kitchen,
because I need Pam once in a while.
Do you use it regularly?
We do, I mean, on our...
On the waffle iron.
On the waffle iron, yeah.
And the kitchen here...
I don't know if I'm excited that you saw our Pam.
No, I know.
The kitchen staff at Elizabeth's, like at Gabriela's, is all Latino.
Orders are called out in Spanish.
Mauro, dame unos pancakes con blueberries, por favor. at Gabriela's is all Latino. Orders are called out in Spanish.
But step through the kitchen door into the dining room
and you get a very different vibe.
Gabriela's has Day of the Dead figurines
and Mexican decor
with empty tequila barrels out front.
Elizabeth's looks like
a New England beach house.
Wainscoting, Martha Stewart-y color palette, brass wall sconces.
The waitstaff is much more of a mix than Gabriella's.
Most definitely not all Latina.
So I have to say, this transports me to a place,
I don't mean to sound racist because it's against me,
but this transports me to a place where there's a lot of white people.
And look, some of my best friends are white people.
So did you feel at some point any kind of, not pressure,
but desire to make the waitstaff look more like East Hampton-y or Connecticut-y?
We really want to reflect the neighborhood here.
I mean, that's really what we wanted to do.
I mean, there's plenty of white people in the neighborhood.
I live in the neighborhood. You live in the neighborhood.
Yeah, we have plenty of white servers, too.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The chef at Elizabeth's Neighborhood Table
is Tomas Arreñas.
He's from Mexico.
Over the past decade plus,
he's worked at a lot of restaurants in New York,
and he says he's noticed a big shift in the demographics.
Everywhere you go now,
you've got to find Mexicans, all Latinos. It's not like a split, he says, between the kitchen and the front of the house, it's more like white people in the front.
Some Latinos, but not a lot.
I think in the back of the house, most of the time, it's Latinos.
If you look at restaurant and food industry jobs in the U.S. by ethnicity,
as compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
you'll see that 25% of those jobs are held by Latinos,
while Latinos make up only 17 percent of the U.S.
population. So for whatever reason or set of reasons, restaurant work has become a Latino stronghold, especially in the kitchen. But here's my question. Is the practice of hiring Latino
servers at a Mexican restaurant or white servers at an American style restaurant or for that matter,
Asian servers at a Japanese or Thai restaurant.
Is this discrimination?
I personally wouldn't call that discrimination,
or at least not the kind of discrimination to get upset about.
That, again, is Steve Levitt, my Freakonomics friend and co-author,
who could see himself opening a Chinese fast food restaurant at an airport.
The kind of discrimination we usually worry about is discrimination where employers make choices about who to hire
based on criteria that are unrelated to performance on the job.
So, for instance, if it's answering a phone and it's men versus women,
when there's no evidence that men are better at answering phones than women.
So I would say in a Chinese restaurant,
looking Asian is an important part of fulfilling the task.
Those people don't cost any more to hire than the Mexican staff at a Mexican restaurant
or the Indian staff at an Indian restaurant,
but they enhance the experience of the people who are dining there.
Because you think that the customer has a happier experience if he or she thinks that the waitstaff is related to the country where the food is from.
That's the reason why it's better or more optimal?
Exactly.
Honestly, as you're describing what does constitute discrimination, I was thinking that this is it, not the opposite of it. No, I think if that Chinese restaurant had not a single Asian person ever in sight, I bet that you and I would talk about that a lot when we were in the restaurant.
And that would be evidence to me that it matters to the customers whether the service staff are Asian or not. Yeah, but that may be just, I'm just curious whether maybe this is just a custom
and because it's been around for a long time, we accept it as either, you know, sensible or optimal
or fair, but maybe in fact, it's none of those. Like, what if I say, you know what? Most podcast
hosts are men or most of the hosts of the biggest podcasts in the world are men. Therefore, that's evidence that men are plainly better. And therefore, I do not want any women
touching my podcast. Isn't that pretty similar to arguing that I do not want any non-Asian people
serving me Asian food? I think that's a little different because your question really intersects
with how we think about markets. And in general,
economists tend to think that when there are a lot of different options for workers to go out
and find jobs in different places, the impact of the kind of discrimination or at least
differentiation that you're describing at this Chinese restaurant just turns out not to be very
important. Now, if there were no jobs, if the only jobs in the economy were Chinese restaurants,
then we would really worry a lot about who gets hired and doesn't at restaurants. But in a world
where there are Japanese restaurants and Mexican restaurants and Indian restaurants and fast food
restaurants, I just can't get too excited about worrying about what I would call discrimination
in terms of hiring when I think you can make a good case, rightly or wrongly, that customers care
who serves them. But if you think about it realistically, why should it matter what the
ethnicity is of the server in a Chinese restaurant? You might very well worry about the cook, but you
don't see the cook. But somehow the server, you're right, is probably just decoration, right? It's not important to the quality of the food.
All right. So, Levitt, let's pretend that the restaurant that you decide to open,
or maybe we'll open it together. You and I are going to open a restaurant together,
let's say in New York, and let's say it's Swedish, okay? And we call it smorgasbord, okay?
Does this mean that you want to hire only really Swedish-looking people?
Absolutely.
You want to hire a bunch of tall, blonde people with blue eyes who are probably good skiers,
and yeah, that's what you want?
For sure. If I have a Swedish restaurant, I want to fill it up not just with people
who are tall and blonde, but who have nice Swedish accents as well, whether they're real or fake.
And so how do you advertise for those jobs in the paper?
That was the longest pause I've ever heard out of Steve Levin.
I've heard some long pauses out of Steve Levin.
Well, one thing I might do is advertise in Stockholm
to really find some people who will come from Sweden and work at your restaurant.
But I think I would start by saying the name of the restaurant and that we serve Swedish cuisine.
Maybe I would advertise in Swedish if I really thought that I wanted to be super serious about that.
Maybe I just advertise at modeling agencies, which will have lots of tall, blonde-haired, blue-eyed women.
All right. But let's be honest. It's trickier to advertise. I'm not going to say
whites only or blondes only for a Swedish restaurant. Whereas if I open an Indian restaurant,
I know that my customers in New York, the vast majority of them may not know or care the difference between an Indian waiter, a Pakistani waiter, a Bangladeshi waiter, etc.
Right.
So I can lump them together comfortably.
I can't lump together like blonde whites, though, comfortably, can I?
And if not, is that fair?
I think you can. you can lump them. Can you tell the
difference between a Swede and a German and a Finn? I can't. At first blush, I'd say absolutely
not, right? But when I say lump together, I mean put out my net to attract them. Yeah, so that is
a different question. I wonder what would happen if you put a want ad in the paper that said, looking for Swedish
looking people to serve in my restaurant.
I'm guessing you're sued within 24 hours.
That's what I'm guessing.
But if you're on Broadway, aren't you allowed to do that?
On Broadway, they could say, we need a character who has these characteristics.
And they would say that's because it's important to how, you know, the play can't be done.
A verisimilitude, right. So, like, if I decide to open, let's say, a restaurant featuring,
you know, Jewish deli food, right, and I want to hire only Jewish waitstaff,
I can do that okay? According to your lights?
Yeah. I mean, not only, of course, what we're saying isn't that you have to hire only Jews to work in your deli.
You just have to hire people who look like they're Jews, who can pass for Jews.
Now, you might actually have a harder time there because what's your risk if you have a deli and people want to start speaking Hebrew or Yiddish?
Then you really want people who are Jewish there.
And the same, what if people come into our smorgasbord restaurant and they start speaking Swedish to our poor German waitresses who don't know anything about Swedish?
We could be in trouble.
And that's the sense in which I think it really is defensible to want to hire people who fit the part.
And I don't know anything about the legal background on it, but I would be fascinated to find out what the legal standing is of those kind of choices, because my hunch is that you might be able to get away with
that. Are you going to have some experts on? You should have a legal expert on, for sure.
Okay, Levitt, after the break, we will have a legal expert on to talk about
ethnic-based restaurant hiring.
The statute is pretty clear.
And if you're taking ethnicity into account, you are technically subject to an employment discrimination lawsuit.
We'll also hear from someone at the federal agency that enforces discrimination law in the workplace.
We don't condone hiring solely on the basis of ethnicity. That is illegal.
You cannot decide we're a Chinese restaurant, we only want Chinese, or we're a Mexican restaurant, we only want Latinos. And because the world is interesting, we'll also talk to a white Irish
American comedian who got a job as a greeter at a Chinese restaurant in China and did not like how
he was greeted.
Hey, listen, buddy.
If I was in New York and I walked into a restaurant
and the welcome was like, oh, you're very welcome.
And I went, oh, you're very welcome.
Oh, welcome to our Western one.
You want to fly in wise?
Well, I'd be arrested. I'm going to go. Des Bishop is a comedian, very popular in some parts of the world.
So would you please welcome Mr. Des Bishop.
That's him appearing on a late night talk show in Ireland.
Oh yeah, thank you. You're so welcome, as always.
This is cool, man.
Bishop grew up in New York and moved to Ireland as a teenager.
He has hosted shows on Irish TV that are part comedy, part reality series.
One of them was about sending an American-Irish comic to China to see how he made out.
Des Bishop is in China.
So, for the past two years, Bishop lived in China.
He studied Mandarin, he lived with a Chinese family and
immersed himself in the culture, and he performed his stand-up act in Mandarin. Okay, so can you
give us like maybe the beginning or a favorite part of your Mandarin routine in Mandarin right
now, and I'll see how it works on me. Okay, this is a quick one. So,
我跟我的女朋友吵架, 她说,我很委屈。
You're just laughing at my Chinese.
That's different.
I love it. I love it.
I'll translate this in a minute.
Okay, later you can translate.
她说,我很委屈,你知道吗?
我很委屈。
然后我看我手机,
然后她就跑了。
我说,你去哪儿?
她说,我们吵架,你看你手机。
我说,我不知道委屈是什么意思。 That吵架。 你看你手机。 我说,我不知道为去是什么意思。
That gets a great laugh.
I actually did that on Chinese television, got a great laugh.
You had me at Tashua.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, so tell me what you actually said.
So basically, that's a joke about an argument I had with my girlfriend.
It's kind of the whole routine.
It comes from a routine about dating a Chinese girl.
Okay.
And so basically, we were having a massive argument. There's not one bit of this that's made up. It's 100 of the whole routine. It comes from a routine about dating a Chinese girl. And so basically we were having a massive argument.
There's not one bit of this that's made up.
It's 100% true.
I have to say, when I hear you talk in Mandarin not understanding literally a single syllable,
I am inclined to laugh just because you sound like a comic.
Do you know what I mean?
Like the melodic, you know, the melody of it and the intensity of it and the way you pace things.
So to me, your Mandarin sounds awesome.
I have no idea.
Is it pretty good or not really?
Well, to my American and Irish friends, it's absolutely amazing.
But for Chinese people, to be honest, for Chinese people,
they find it amazing that I can get laughs with my very average, if not poor, Mandarin.
But I get away with it with, I guess, maybe the bit of New York confidence or something.
So my Chinese is not bad.
For the amount of time I've been studying, it's pretty good.
But it's by no means eloquently fluent.
As part of the TV show that Des Bishop was making in China for Irish TV,
he took a job as a greeter in a Chinese restaurant.
Not a host, just a greeter.
A host
actually sits people. I literally just had to
greet people. That's all you did?
Why would they hire someone to do that?
That's a job. I mean, let's do that.
That's like a real job in China.
A yin bing yuan is literally
a welcomer. That's their job.
So you would literally say hello to people as they came
in and say goodbye when they left and thank you?
Yeah, and you have to say it very loudly.
It's a Chinese thing. When you're in China, you know, it's like
you walk in and they're like, guan yin, guan yin, really
loudly. And I guess people feel it
gives them face or whatever.
The job was in Hugong, a city
of about a million people, relatively
small as Chinese cities go.
Bishop lived with the other employees
in staff housing.
The restaurant fed him and paid him about $300 a month.
And just tell me a little bit, just because I have no idea, I'm curious to know,
is going out to eat in a restaurant like this, in a city like this, is it kind of a special deal, or is it more like a once-a- that families will do is it more for celebration is it
more uh you know adults or families or even teenagers just tell me a little bit about mostly
adults and families i mean the the speciality of this restaurant is it's all rooms there's no actual
there's there was no actual like you know like canteen part it was all like private rooms
uh but but you know eating out has become affordable in China. I mean, food prices are low
and the economy is booming and people can go out to eat. So it was largely always busy.
And it's just a middle level, just busy restaurant with people just going out and having a nice time.
What's the name of the restaurant?
I actually can't even remember. That's what's so embarrassing. To be honest,
my Chinese was so bad at the time. I don't even think i ever really registered the name the name of the restaurant the name but i
just knew how to get there i knew how to point in in the taxi all right you're uh a white guy
and i'm guessing in a city this size there aren't a lot of white guys around no i'm the only white
guy that's ever done this job probably in the history of china let alone the history of this
small town so everyday customers would arrive and i wouldn't really become a welcomer. I would become the guy
that has the same conversation every day, all day. I would just like talk to customers and they'd be
like, why are you here? I see. All right. So tell me, okay. So pretend I walk in, greet me.
And then I would say, might say uh Wuxing Wuxing Li
like my name is Li
and then I might
just look at the book
and say
uh
Falali
all the rooms were named
after expensive cars
so I would say
oh
Nimenzai Falali
which is Ferrari
and uh
so then I would
I would
but to be honest
that so rarely happened
because my Chinese was bad
so like he would say
Wuxing Li and like it's easy for me to say it now.
I can even see the character, but back then I couldn't, you know?
So really what I would say,
sometimes I would get confident.
I would say,
like what room, sir?
And they wouldn't even acknowledge me.
They would just turn to a Chinese person,
assuming that there is no way in the world I could have got them to the right room.
And that, Des Bishop says, was the common response from restaurant customers in Hougang, China,
seeing this American-Irish host in their Chinese restaurant.
This is the number one sound I would hear every day.
Eh?
It's just like that.
What?
Literally, because that's a sound Chinese people make.
Eh?
And then so 50% of the time they would talk to me, 50% they would just ignore me.
You know, Chinese people, it's funny because we're very politically correct here nowadays
and we're kind of obsessed with it.
And people here often think that the main issue that you would encounter
is like how to work around the sensitivities of race in China.
But there are no sensitivities around race.
They're all Chinese, right?
A few weeks into his greeter job, Bishop was starting to feel pretty comfortable. And then
one night, he says, these three drunk guys came into the restaurant. Now, this town is in Dongbei.
It's in the northeast of China, which has a reputation for the people being a bit rough
around the edges, a bit gregarious, right? So these three guys come in smoking with their man bags.
They all have man bags.
And I did my best huanying guanling.
And then one of them really loudly in front of all the staff, like in front of all the
girls, because by the way, it's also a girl's job that I'm doing.
I'm like the only guy that's ever done it.
That's why I'm so high pitched when I say huanying guanling, because I learned it off
of these women that were surrounding me.
And so I said huanying guanling.
And then one of them really loudly like
in front of everybody goes huan ying huan ling and does like an impersonation of my bad chinese
you know with like a really sort of like you know like a like a voice of making fun of me and i
remember thinking like you cannot huan ying huan ling me this is not acceptable i'm the only white
guy in this town that is definitely racist now i know that people say there's no such thing as reverse racism,
but I definitely felt for the first time in my life just like more of an other than I'd ever felt before.
Did it bother you or did you just say that's the way?
It bothered me because I thought, hey, listen, buddy, if I was in New York and I walked into a restaurant
and the welcome was like, oh, you're very welcome.
And I went, oh, you're very welcome.
Oh, welcome to all Western.
You want to find wise? Well, I'd be arrested. But I immediately, I mean,
it was immediate. Sometimes you just have a moment of immediacy when it comes to material.
I immediately said, thank you, a-hole, because that is definitely a routine. I cannot wait to
tell that story in comedy clubs in the West, because I just knew that it was like absolutely
true, but an absolutely winning moment.
So if the American-Irish Des Bishop was not authentic enough as a Mandarin-speaking greeter in China,
where all the customers were Chinese, would he be any more authentic as an English-speaking host
at maybe a Chinese restaurant in New York or California or Salt Lake City?
Or, to ask the question we really want to answer, is the practice of hiring restaurant workers who match the cuisine fair?
Yeah, there are a couple of different ways to answer that question.
That's the legal expert we promised you.
John Donahue teaches at Stanford Law School.
He's an economist as well as a lawyer.
And he's an expert on employment discrimination.
One is, if fairness is defined by the employment discrimination laws, it probably isn't fair or legal to do this. And there are some caveats there, but as a general matter, hiring decisions are not supposed
to be made on the basis of ethnicity with some caveats.
Donahue says this goes back to a certain piece of landmark American legislation.
The 1964 Civil Rights Act, which was the federal law that prohibited
discrimination on the basis of race, sex, gender, and so on and so forth, was one of the most
important laws passed at the federal level in this country in the last century. Title VII of that law
protects against employment discrimination. But one caveat, Donahue tells us, is firm size.
At the federal level, only firms with 15 or more employees are subject to this law,
although in some states the number is less.
Another potential caveat, Donahue says, is the job itself.
There could be a situation where the discrimination is permitted
if it's a bona fide occupational characteristic.
Say that phrase again.
A bona fide occupational qualification.
A bona fide...
A BFOQ.
Okay.
That is a narrowly tailored term of art.
And the idea behind the BFOQ defense
is that you needed to hire in this otherwise discriminatory way because it's sort of an essential trait of the job.
Ah, I see. That would explain Hooters, I guess. Yes, that's why neither you nor I could get a job at Hooters.
Exactly. So Hooters wins out on that rationale.
But the BFOQ defense is a tricky one.
Hooters might argue that its customers don't want to see me or John Donahue in those bright orange short shorts and white tank tops.
But how do they know?
Maybe I could broaden their clientele and maximize their profits.
Consider another industry that used to argue that being a certain kind of female was an essential part of the job.
It goes back to the early days of the 1964 civil rights laws application, where, for example, a number of the airlines initially tried to defend their practice of hiring attractive young women to be stewardesses on these airlines. And the reason they did that,
at the time, in the 60s, it was largely a male business clientele that they were trying to
appeal to, and they thought that they would find the fact of being served by a young and often required to be unmarried woman
would be appealing to the customers.
This began to change in the late 1960s with a lawsuit filed by the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, or EEOC. That's the agency that enforces Title VII.
And a man named Celio Diaz Jr.
He wanted to be a flight attendant,
and he sued Pan American Airlines for discrimination.
And they defended, they said,
look, we're not doing anything discriminatory.
We're just satisfying our customers' demands.
And they brought in surveys that showed overwhelmingly
their customers
did want to be served by young, unmarried, and presumably attractive women. But the courts ruled
that part of what the employment discrimination laws try to do is overcome discriminatory
preferences and perhaps change those discriminatory preferences by opening
up the job to everyone in a non-discriminatory fashion. But I wonder, you know, look, we just
lived through a period where unemployment could be really crushing for a lot of people. And there
were a lot of people who were willing to take a lot of jobs that they might not have been willing
to take five years earlier, 10 years earlier in a different economy. And I could imagine that there would be some people out there based on nothing more than what their face looks like that said, you know, I would have loved to have a job waiting off limits to me. So could you imagine a time in the perhaps not too distant future where this kind of
hiring practice is looked at as unacceptable and perhaps even illegal?
Certainly could happen. And the statute is pretty clear. And if you're taking ethnicity into account without some of these other possible defenses being present, you are technically subject to an employment discrimination lawsuit.
I was wondering if we might care more if these were better paying jobs, right? software engineering or lawyering, for instance, where the stakes are financially higher.
Do you think we might have a different outlook on this kind of what seems to be just a,
you know, kind of casual go-along, get-along racial profiling hiring practice in restaurants?
Yeah, absolutely. The EEOC would care more, but even more to the point,
Title VII gives a private right of action to anyone who's excluded, and they're about, you know, the number of employees.
You can also imagine in a slightly different twist from the way we've been describing it,
that, you know, let's say a Japanese restaurant owner hires relatives.
Then you could say, well, we're not discriminating on the basis of ethnicity,
we're discriminating on the basis of, you know, familial relationship, and that might be
a way around. But that doesn't get to the core question that we've been discussing, where you're
not just hiring within your ethnicity, but in a sense, doing a little bit of a bait and switch by hiring other ethnicities.
I asked Steve Levitt the same question, whether the kind of hiring that restaurants do might
pass under the radar because these are relatively low paying jobs.
What if, for instance, I'm starting an e-commerce site meant to appeal to Chinese customers
and I decide I only want to hire Chinese programmers?
It's a tough question because I believe a lot in the power of firm culture
and in the view that intangible things can dramatically affect productivity at companies.
But you've got to be super careful when you go down that path that the end result isn't to support some sort of massive subtext of discrimination,
saying, well, we can't hire black people at this company because black people don't have the right culture for our company.
I mean, that's the trade-off. But on the other hand, when I hire
people, say, at the greatest good, I don't care at all about their gender or their ethnicity,
but I care a whole lot about whether they're fun to be around and they smile a lot and they work
hard. And I don't believe any of those characteristics are correlated with either gender or ethnicity. But on the other hand, I don't know.
If you start out by hiring a bunch of rich white people,
maybe you end up wanting to hire a bunch more rich white people, and that can be a problem.
It's tricky, really hard issues.
The issue of discrimination is one of the trickiest ones when it comes to the courts
and when it comes to markets and thinking about it,
because even the right definition of what it means to be discriminatory is subtle and it depends on the context.
How about the context of a retail clothing store?
Maybe you caught this story recently about a discrimination case the EEOC won.
Bit of breaking news now from the U.S. Supreme Court. Earlier today they ruled in
favor of a Muslim woman who filed a lawsuit after she was denied a job at an Abercrombie and Fitch
clothing store because she wore a headscarf for religious reasons. Eight to one vote this was.
That lawsuit that just came down started when a 17-year-old teenager walked into one of our offices or called one of our offices,
and we took her case all the way through the lower court, the appeals court, and then to the Supreme
Court. That is Justine Lisser. She's a lawyer who works as a spokesperson for the EEOC,
and she says the agency has brought several suits against restaurants that hire along ethnic lines,
as we've been talking about today. We sued a Houston restaurant, which was supposed to be
an upscale Mexican restaurant that fired already hired servers, one of whom was African American,
one of whom was Vietnamese, because they, quote, didn't speak Spanish. But it had an extremely
diverse group of patrons. It certainly
didn't have only a Spanish-speaking group of patrons. And the reason of not speaking Spanish
was, we were alleging, was a pretext to make sure that all of their servers were Hispanic,
again, to sort of fit in with the theme. And this is not legal. I mean, for any restaurant or any
employer to put in a requirement, like a language requirement, it has to be, and this is the legal
phrase of art, job-related and consistent with business necessity. And in most instances,
it is not job-related and consistent with business necessity.
Lisser says one reason there haven't been more cases like this is that the EEOC is a charge-driven agency.
In other words, a restaurant worker would have to come to them.
We don't go out looking for discrimination.
We don't have the resources or our law doesn't really permit it, people
come to us and file charges.
And we sort of take those charges and investigate them.
And in some instances, we file a lawsuit in federal court on them.
And I want to make very clear that whether or not the EEOC has in fact sued anybody,
we don't condone hiring solely on the basis of ethnicity.
That is illegal.
You cannot decide we're a Chinese restaurant, we only want Chinese,
or we're a Mexican restaurant, we only want Latinos.
And maybe we need to step up our outreach to specific ethnic chambers of commerce, if they exist, or different organizations of restaurant owners, and let them know what is and is not against the law.
Well, Bailey Hicken in Salt Lake City, Utah, thanks for the question about restaurant hiring.
As you can see, there are a lot of answers, most of them not fully satisfactory.
Personally, I'm kind of torn by what we learned today.
If there is a labor market that has customarily organized itself pretty well, maybe with some self-selection.
And it seems to be working OK for the firms, the employees and the customers.
Well, maybe we should just leave it alone.
Who wants more lawyers involved?
But on the other hand, if this custom or whatever it is,
is preventing people who need jobs from getting them based simply on the way they look, well, that's not cool.
And it goes against the grain of what a restaurant is supposed to be. A place you can go when you're hungry, maybe tired, and sit down, maybe with your family or a bunch of friends, maybe even alone,
and pay some money for the privilege of being served right then and there a nice warm meal. That's why I go to a place like Gabriela's,
a nearby place you can walk to where you might run into other people you know.
Here to take us home is Nat Milner. We want to be the place where the neighborhood comes to
celebrate. You know, we're not trying to be the greatest restaurant in New York City. You only
go to that restaurant on your birthday or anniversary. We want to be your favorite
restaurant. We want to be your favorite restaurant.
We want to be the place you come home, take off your tie, kick off your high heels,
come down, grab a margarita and some guacamole and relax.
Whether you're celebrating Surviving Monday or some milestone event,
we want to be the place that the neighborhood comes to to hang out.
We have these little rooms here that you can just grab.
I don't know about your apartment, but we can entertain in ours.
It's full of kids and stuff.
So whenever we get together with people, just like anyone else in the neighborhood,
we grab a little room, have guests over, have some fun, celebrate.
Cheers.
To honesty.
To honesty. Coming up next week on Freakonomics Radio,
some restaurants are so good that people wait in line for them.
It's hot.
I could keel over right now.
How long ago did you get here?
About, say, three days ago.
You've been here for 45 minutes already? What is a line, anyway, from an economic perspective?
We use queues as a way to deal with short-term fluctuations in demand.
Okay, fluctuate this. Standing in line stinks. So, what's to be done about it?
There are a lot of good ideas that people hate when you tell them about it.
You'll hate this idea, all right. That's next time on Freakonomics Radio.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by WNYC Studios and Dubner Productions. Thank you. Thanks for listening.