"It doesn't mean you can eat and drink for free, you just pay what you like," majority investor Liu Pengfei said. "The box is not transparent, so no one will know how much you paid. If you have the nerve, you can just walk away and pay no money." It appears, however, that many do have the nerve. Despite being packed almost every day, he said the restaurant has so far lost 250,000 yuan (£25,000, $41,100). Peng Yong, another investor who also works as a chef, estimated about 20 percent of diners pay nothing. With its central location, the monthly running costs are 60,000 yuan, he said, while the average daily loss is about 2,000 yuan.
He plans to chat with people who do not pay and encourage them to explain why. "They can tell me they don't have enough money, that's fine. But paying nothing and saying nothing is totally different," Liu said. "Honesty is the first step to building trust. In my eyes, those who don't pay are sick." Gan Mantang, a sociologist at Fuzhou University, called Five Loaves and Two Fish an experiment in idealism. He suggested it display a price list because the economic loss could be a result of diners underestimating the cost. Liu said he has no idea how long the restaurant will stay in business, but added: "I want to continue ... as I believe the feeling of trust is contagious."
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