Business Standard

DRIVERS’ PROBLEMS WITH UBER, OLA CONTINUE

Cash in hand dwindles for drivers even as cab aggregator­s shower corporate incentives

- KARAN CHOUDHURY

It was a promise of monthly earnings of anywhere between ~80,000 and ~100,000 that made Ghanshyam Jadhav, a father of three, take a loan of ~150,000 from relatives as down payment for a new Swift Dzire car. A year and a half ago, following advice from a friend, he joined the 300,000-plus fleet of Uber and Ola cab drivers in the National Capital Region (NCR).

Initially, for Jadhav, things were fine. He was earning around ~65,000, and after fuel money, maintenanc­e charges and commission charged by Uber and Ola, he was able to take home around ~30,000.

Cut to November 2018, soaring fuel, inflating commission rates of cab aggregator­s, rise in the number of cabs led to Jadhav’s income — without expenses — dwindle to ~35,000 a month. This forced him to give up his car, and start working as a cash courier for a small financial firm. The dream of being an “entreprene­ur”, something the cab aggregator­s promised their “driver partners”, ended for Jadhav.

The situation is the same for thousands of other drivers, who periodical­ly come out on the streets to protest against the two biggest cab aggregator­s. While the drivers have a range of demands, starting from not inducting additional cabs to verificati­on of customers for safety, the main unresolved issue is still the diminishin­g monthly cash in hand.

In the last two years, nearly 35 big and small protests of drivers have happened in the NCR, Mumbai, Kolkata, Pune, Bengaluru, Ludhiana, Chandigarh and other cities. The latest one being the almost twoweek long standoff in Mumbai. While the companies claim the issues have been resolved, they have not been able to achieve a long-term solution.

“Uber is pleased to announce that independen­t driver partners, registered with the Uber app in Mumbai, will return to work immediatel­y, effectivel­y ending a 12-day-old strike. A special Diwali incentive for Uber drivers set to expire November 5 will be extended till November 15 for those who resumed driving. Uber will endeavour to examine a fuel price-based earnings index to look at ways of making net earnings on the platform more sustainabl­e,” the Uber spokespers­on said. Its biggest competitor, Ola, sent a similar statement regarding the ending of the protest.

From having health and life insurances, scholarshi­ps for children, to functions and parties to cheer up drivers, cab aggregator­s are trying everything, but increasing the monthly take home of a driver.

Even after multiple strikes, nothing seems to have changed. “Even after a year or so of launching our series of agitations, the situation is still the same. They said our income would be close to ~100,000. We took loans, bought cabs, and initially earned ~80,000-90,000 monthly. Slowly, the commission increased and the income fell,” said S P Soni, general secretary, the Sarvodaya Driver Associatio­n, New Delhi.

According to an industry insider, cab aggregator­s caught between showing profitabil­ity to investors, increasing their network and dabbling in areas such as food ordering have seen a major blow to their primary business. Plus, the people they hire to deal with the drivers do not know how to manage crisis.

“Human resources exercises such as having functions to award employees, giving their children scholarshi­ps might work in a large corporate house. A driver, whose primary objective is to get the maximum cash in hand and use it to take care of his family, does not care about these initiative­s. Companies need to become practical,” said a CEO of a radio taxi firm.

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 ??  ?? Drivers protest against Ola and Uber in New Delhi last month
Drivers protest against Ola and Uber in New Delhi last month

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