Answer:
this depends on the reputation of the hotel 3,4,5 star hotels each one has got its own price to offer
That is about right. When someone starts out, even in a 5 star hotel they get the same wage as in a 3 star hotel. At least that is how it is in Australia.
You get payed more depending on the years you have worked and the specific salaries of those hotels. I know for a fact that for example, a waiter gets paid more in Hilton Hotel than in Inter Continental
Waiters in the US and UK get paid minimum wage, plus tips or service charge.
(The US waiter earns roughly 15 to 20% in tips, then has to tip-out to co-workers like floor managers, busboys, hostess, bartenders. In the UK often a 12.5% service charge is added to the bill, but most restaurants gouge that by 20% and another 20% is taken out in taxes, and then 'pooled' amongst all the workers - in some cases the kitchen staff also - so the difference a waiter earns between the two countries is substantial.)
In Japan, most junior waiters earn the equivalent of $10 - $12 USD, but Japan is not a tipping society and the cost of living is very high in comparison (rent for a very small apartment may be $1,000 a month and $8 for a draft beer, for example.)
In Australia, the wage is very decent but the tips are relatively low - perhaps just 'round up' to the next higher dollar amount. eg: the bill is 22.30, leaving the .70 would be an acceptable tip.