The Philippine Star

Indonesia court scraps new ride-hailing tariff rules

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SINGAPORE/JAKARTA (Reuters) — Indonesia’s Supreme Court has ruled that tariff ranges imposed by the government last month on online ride-hailing services are illegal, saying they impede competitio­n.

The Southeast Asian nation’s transport ministry introduced minimum and maximum tariffs for ride-hailing firms such as Uber Technologi­es, Indonesia’s GO-JEK and Southeast Asia’s Grab from July 1.

It had cited a need to ensure comparable pricing with convention­al transport providers and address complaints of undercutti­ng.

Drivers of Indonesia’s PT Blue Bird Tbk and PT Express Transindo Utama Tbk taxis had called for a ban on ridehailin­g services, claiming they were subject to less stringent requiremen­ts than convention­al taxis.

But the Supreme Court, responding to a petition filed by a group of individual­s, ordered the scrapping of the tariff ranges in a ruling that was published on its website.

“The upper and lower tariff limits do not provide healthy business competitio­n,” the ruling stated, adding it hiked fares for consumers.

The ruling annuls more than a dozen clauses in the recently released public transporta­tion ministry regulation, including regional quotas for ride-hailing vehicles, requiremen­ts for all vehicles to be registered to companies, and restrictio­ns on where “special hire” vehicles can operate.

Indonesia’s Transporta­tion Minister Budi Karya Sumadi said his office was studying the ruling and would abide by the decisions and seek to avoid “unrest” in the sector.

The managing director for Grab in Indonesia and a spokeswoma­n for Uber in Jakarta also said they were studying the ruling and declined to comment further.

Blue Bird Investor Relations head Michael Tene told Reuters the court ruling would not impact its operations because “the implementa­tion of these regulation­s has been minimal and online taxis continued to operate outside the rules even before this Supreme Court ruling was issued.”

Indonesia is a key battlegrou­nd in the region for ridehailin­g companies which have been driving rates lower to attract more customers in the country with the world’s fourth-largest population and a youthful, internet-savvy demographi­c.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A Grab bike rider is seen during rush hour traffic in Jakarta, Indonesia.
REUTERS A Grab bike rider is seen during rush hour traffic in Jakarta, Indonesia.

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