What if on your next coffee run, you discover that Starbucks has started running on the honor system? All the baristas are gone, and in their place, you find Tupperware filled with coins and bills. Would you pay for your daily soy Latte? Or would you "forget" to shell out the five bucks? Be honest.
This, of course, is only a thought experiment, as I doubt Starbucks will be adopting the honor policy anytime soon. But in another part of the world, it's a real question that residents are facing on a daily basis. As the New York Times recently reported, the attorney general's office in Indonesia has been opening thousands of "honesty cafes" as part of its anticorruption campaign.
The idea is that these cashier-free cafes will teach people to be honest and curb the country's corruption problem (which pervades business, politics, and education) by inducing residents - especially the young - to get into the habit of practicing honesty. As the Times reports, "...the cafes are meant to force people to think constantly about whether they are being honest and, presumably, make them feel guilty if they are not."










