Taxis Don't Have a Prayer

Taxis Don't Have a Prayer

Ever since the emergence of Uber and DiDi and Gett and Yandex and all the rest of the app-based ride hailing operators I have been worried about taxis.?I had a sneaking suspicion that the ride hail operators were exploiting a loophole that put taxis at a disadvantage creating a mortal threat.

My suspicions were borne out by taxi driver protests throughout the world and by individual driver suicides.?In this context, I was heartened when map-maker HERE introduced the world to HERE Mobility – an Israeli-based operation dedicated to the creation of a fleet management platform – which had all the earmarks of a global taxi aggregation solution. A way for taxi Davids around the world to take on ride hailing Goliaths maybe?

HERE Mobility looked to me like a global taxi-based alternative to ride hailing – a way for taxi operators to fight back against the ride hailing phenomenon.?While HERE Mobility’s mission was broader than this, the ultimately doomed initiative (HERE Mobility shuttered its operations almost two years ago) highlighted the basic challenges facing the taxi industry in its efforts to take on app-based ride hailers.

That challenge – competing with an app - was further highlighted for me upon my arrival in Israel Saturday, to attend Ecomotion.?While local taxi regulations in Israel supposedly require all taxis to accept credit card payments, the reality is something quite different and it highlights the fatal flaw in the taxi eco-system.

As I was entering my taxi at Ben Gurion airport I asked the driver if he would accept credit card payment as I was Shekel-less.?We were well on our way to Tel Aviv before it became clear that the driver did not have a means to accept credit card payment.?He suggested we could stop at an ATM machine – which are ubiquitous in the city.

There are few things sketchier than a taxi driver driving a customer to an ATM to obtain cash to pay for the ride.?It has all the earmarks of a hostage situation – particularly considering the need to leave the vehicle along with one’s possessions – to obtain that essential cash.

Everything worked out fine and there were no hard feelings, but the experience was a head scratcher.?Didn’t this taxi driver understand that cashless payment was one of the core value propositions of app-based transportation from operators such as Gett and Yango in Israel?

The overwhelming convenience of a line of waiting taxis at the airport – or any other similar taxi “rank” – is vastly diminished if those taxis are insisting on cash payment.?But the challenges facing taxi operators are even greater than that.

The cards are indeed stacked against individual taxi operators because the sector is both highly regulated and fragmented.?The appeal of HERE Mobility lay in its ability to attract hundreds of taxi operators around the world to its aggregation platform.

Aggregation alone, though, was not enough to overcome the structural impediments to successful competition with ride hailing operators.?Taxi app operator Curb has learned this reality the hard way.

In the U.S., where Curb operates, taxi regulators impose two burdens that are nearly impossible for drivers to overcome.?First, taxis are generally not allowed to quote a fixed fare for a ride – with the exception of zoned fares which are predetermined in many markets.?And, second, taxi operators are usually confined to operating within or out of a specific geographic area.

Curb has sought to overcome the first restriction be obtaining wavers – one market at a time in the U.S. – to allow participating drivers to quote fixed fares for a particular trip.?Quoting a fixed fare is simply taken for granted for ride hail operators – but generally forbidden for taxis.?The only thing working in favor of taxis, in respect to fares, is the inability of taxis to use surge pricing – but, if the traffic is heavy, the regular taxi passenger will pay more anyway.

As for the second issue, geographic constraints, taxi drivers hands are simply tied.?A taxi operating out of Washington, DC, for example, can take a fare to the suburbs (which include three different states), but cannot turnaround and bring a fare from the suburbs back into the city – the Washington-based taxi must dead-head back to DC.

Ubers and Lyfts can pick up fares from almost anywhere and drop them almost anywhere with few, if any, constraints.?We won’t even bother to dwell on the fact that these drivers are using their own or a rented car with limited regulatory oversight of the vehicle’s condition or operation.

All of these impediments – nearly unlimited geographic operating area, fixed pricing, personal/rental vehicle operation, non-existent regulatory oversight, app-based cashless convenience – mean that taxis simply do not have a prayer.?Without significant regulatory review – less regulations for taxis or more regulations for ride hail operators – the days of taxis are limited as is their scope of operation.

The one policy strategy that seems to make sense and to have some enduring credibility is the option – taken in countries such as Germany and Turkey – to require ride hail companies to cooperate with existing taxi operators.?This seems to be an effective working solution – but not one that has been universally adopted.

Taxi operators – highly regulated and fragmented – with taxi drivers clinging to their cash-centric ways of doing business, will need help to survive.?If regulators are unwilling to impose a co-operative approach, then it’s time to lighten the regulatory burden to give the sector a fighting chance.?This is especially true if existing regulations are either not enforced or routinely ignored.?

We need taxis.?We should not forget that ride hailing is a luxury proposition and transportation a societal necessity.?The ride hailers should not be allowed to skim off the cream and leave the less profitable and less favorable fares to taxis. That's not fair.

Derek Kerton

Catalyst for Innovation at Kerton Group; Founder: Telecom Council, Autotech Council, Cleantech Council

2 年

Horse-drawn Hansom Cabs shifted to automobiles. The MaaS industry didn't disappear as we shifted from the former to the latter, it just adapted to the times. The same is happening again. It's not that we won't have "taxis" if the conventional taxi services die, it's that Rideshare IS the modern taxi. When you hailed a cab in the late 20th century, you didn't expect a Hansom Cab to pull up. But you used the old "cab" terminology to refer to the modern replacement of the Hansom. Cars replaced horses, because they were better in multiple ways (& worse in fewer ways). So, too, with Rideshare: -Cashless payment, pre-ride price estimates -visibility on a map -the ability to "hail" before you are on the curb -less chance of being scammed with "the long drive around" -the ability to contact your driver if you forgot something -ratings -newer vehicles There's simply no contest. Taxis sucked, but we tolerated them as occasionally the best option we had. It was ripe for disruption, & so it was. And EVEN if we agree that Uber, for example, is an antagonist, we probably also agree that the legacy taxi industry is no protagonist. Sympathy is near nil for "medallion" holders. Still, we may see Roger's ideas for a MORE ideal solution emerge.

Robert Clark

EMODE Outdoors: Electric Mobility Development for Outdoor Recreation Destinations and On-Site

2 年

In honor of Roger’s piece. I suggest flying Taxis will change the paradigm. 25th anniversary upcoming, And I know Roger’s a film buff! https://apple.news/AVB5P5AO0RhyFnPxYfOkPJw

Paul Drysch

40K+ Followers - Founder and CEO at PreAct Technologies (Retired)

2 年

Taxis are making a big comeback at airports in general though(both to and from). Here in California, the cost of an Uber vs a taxi at an airport is almost comparable on most days and when there is a surge, an Uber can be up to triple the cost of the taxi. Not to mention how painful it is to get to your Uber vs just walking out to the curb in front of the baggage claim and hopping into a waiting taxi. I've had similar experiences in elsewhere in the US as well recently.

Gary Vermaak

Its electrifying!

2 年

An uber is still a taxi. If you can't beat em, join em.

First I thought you write about arriving at Berlin airport... ??

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