NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Airbnb hosts, Uber drivers and waiters who are more politically conservative get slightly higher ratings and tips

  • Written by Alexander Davidson, Assistant Professor of Marketing, Wayne State University
imageDo your driver's political beliefs affect the service he provides?AP Photo/Anita Snow

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Customers give higher ratings and tips to politically conservative Airbnb hosts, Uber drivers and waiters than to ones with more liberal leanings, according to new peer-reviewed research...

Read more: Airbnb hosts, Uber drivers and waiters who are more politically conservative get slightly higher...

More Articles ...

  1. If China's middle class continues to thrive and grow, what will it mean for the rest of the world?
  2. Numbers can trip you up during the pandemic – here are 4 tips to help you figure out tricky stats
  3. Arbor Day should be about growing trees, not just planting them
  4. FBI reaches out to Hasidic Jews to fight antisemitism – but bureau has fraught history with Judaism
  5. FTC warns the AI industry: Don't discriminate, or else
  6. Census results shift political power in Congress, presidential elections
  7. Trans youth are coming out and living in their gender much earlier than older generations
  8. QAnon hasn't gone away – it's alive and kicking in states across the country
  9. The FBI is breaking into corporate computers to remove malicious code – smart cyber defense or government overreach?
  10. How do people make paper out of trees, and why not use something else?
  11. How lifting children out of poverty today will help them tomorrow
  12. How Biden's request for more education funding would shift more power to the federal government
  13. US landmarks bearing racist and Colonial references are renamed to reflect Indigenous values
  14. Restart of the Johnson Johnson COVID-19 vaccine: A doctor explains why benefits far outweigh risks
  15. Warp drives: Physicists give chances of faster-than-light space travel a boost
  16. This supermoon has a twist – expect flooding, but a lunar cycle is masking effects of sea level rise
  17. How Richard Nixon's obsession with Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers sowed the seeds for the president's downfall
  18. Asian American young adults are the only racial group with suicide as their leading cause of death, so why is no one talking about this?
  19. GPS tracking could help tigers and traffic coexist in Asia
  20. For Vladimir Putin and other autocrats, ruthlessly repressing the opposition is often a winning way to stay in power
  21. ¿Aumento o pérdida de peso no deseado durante la pandemia? El estrés podría tener la culpa
  22. Declaring racism a public health crisis brings more attention to solving long-ignored racial gaps in health
  23. New US climate pledge: Cut emissions 50% this decade, but can Biden make it happen?
  24. The other George Floyd story: How media freedom led to conviction in his killer's trial
  25. Why corporate America appears to be drifting away from the Republican Party
  26. Money alone can't fix Central America – or stop migration to US
  27. Best schools often out of reach for disadvantaged students in choice programs
  28. You don't have a male or female brain – the more brains scientists study, the weaker the evidence for sex differences
  29. Lab–grown embryos and human–monkey hybrids: Medical marvels or ethical missteps?
  30. What Homer's 'Odyssey' can teach us about reentering the world after a year of isolation
  31. Shakespeare's musings on religion are like curious whispers – they require deep listening to be heard
  32. Do you really need to drink 8 glasses of water a day? An exercise scientist explains why your kidneys say 'no'
  33. Chauvin conviction: 2 things to know about jury bias and 2 ways to reduce it
  34. Environmental DNA – how a tool used to detect endangered wildlife ended up helping fight the COVID-19 pandemic
  35. Vaccine mandates aren't the only – or easiest – way for employers to compel workers to get their shots
  36. Yes, online communities pose risks for young people, but they are also important sources of support
  37. Why our dislikes should be celebrated as much as our likes
  38. Famine in the Bible is more than a curse: It is a signal of change and a chance for a new beginning
  39. Misinformation, disinformation and hoaxes: What’s the difference?
  40. Why this trial was different: Experts react to guilty verdict for Derek Chauvin
  41. How parents can support a child who comes out as trans – by conquering their own fears, following their child's lead and tolerating ambiguity
  42. The ups and downs of European soccer are part of its culture – moving to a US-style 'closed' Super League would destroy that
  43. Hydrogen is one future fuel oil execs and environmentalists could both support as rival countries search for climate solutions
  44. The US electric power sector is halfway to zero carbon emissions
  45. Domestic violence calls for help increased during the pandemic – but the answers haven't gotten any easier
  46. No visits and barely any calls – pandemic makes separation even scarier for people with a family member in prison
  47. Student loan debt is costing recent grads much more than just money
  48. Why it's good for kids to have friends from different socioeconomic backgrounds
  49. There are plenty of moral reasons to be vaccinated – but that doesn’t mean it’s your ethical duty
  50. An advantage of the government's new payments for families: Not humiliating poor people