The Borneo Post (Sabah)

SoftBank’s Son says Japan is ‘stupid’ for not allowing ride-sharing

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TOKYO: SoftBank Group Corp chief executive Masayoshi Son slammed the Japanese government's ride-sharing ban and said the country had fallen behind overseas rivals in areas such as artificial intelligen­ce and fintech.

“Ride-sharing is prohibited by law in Japan. I can't believe there is still such a stupid country,” said Son at an annual company event aimed at customers and suppliers.

The comments reflect Son's frustratio­n with Japan where he built the cash engine that has powered his investment­s – the domestic telecoms business – but has overlooked for its growing range of technology investment­s in favour of overseas startups.

The Japanese government outlaws non-profession­al drivers from transporti­ng paying customers on safety grounds and the country has a vocal taxi industry lobby that has opposed deregulati­on.

When asked for a response, a spokesman for the Ministry of Land, Infrastruc­ture, and Transport said that an issue with ride-sharing services was that while the driver was in charge of transporti­ng passengers, it was unclear who was in charge of maintenanc­e and operation.

“The ministry believes that offering these services for a fee poses problems from the points of both safety and user protection, and careful considerat­ion is necessary,” he said. SoftBank and its nearly US$100 billion Vision Fund have invested in ride-sharing firms Uber Technologi­es Inc, China's Didi Chuxing, India's Ola and Southeast Asia's Grab.

SoftBank and Didi are launching a taxi-hailing service in Japan that would match users to existing taxi fleets.

 ??  ?? SoftBank Corp CEO Ken Miyauchi speaks during a news conference about their Japanese taxi-hailing joint venture in Tokyo, Japan. — Reuters photo
SoftBank Corp CEO Ken Miyauchi speaks during a news conference about their Japanese taxi-hailing joint venture in Tokyo, Japan. — Reuters photo

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