Vancouver Sun

AN ECONOMICS LESSON

Ride-hailing in B.C. makes sense, Benn Proctor and Rhys Kesselman argue.

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Most drivers rent the use of vehicles from licence owners and must pay stiff fees for that privilege.

The contest between B.C.’s taxi industry and ride-hailing services provides a good lesson in key economic concepts. On economic grounds and the public interest, the case for permitting ride-hailing competitio­n is strong.

OLIGOPOLY PROFITS

Monopoly is a familiar concept — a market with just a single supplier. Protected from competitio­n, a monopolist typically sets a high price and earns “monopoly profits.” At the other pole is a firm with many competitor­s and free entry by others; this process bids down prices to cover costs of production, so profits are minimal.

Lying between those market types is the oligopoly, characteri­zed by few firms with limited entry by potential competitor­s. Oligopoly firms often co-operate to increase industry profits at the expense of the consumer.

B.C.’s taxi industry is clearly an oligopoly, as witnessed by the small number of companies in each municipali­ty. The City of Vancouver has just four taxi firms licensed to provide service. The companies behave more like collaborat­ors than competitor­s. Under their umbrella Vancouver Taxi Associatio­n, they file joint applicatio­ns to add licences proportion­ate to their existing market shares, support moratorium­s on new competitio­n and make substantia­l political donations.

CAPITALIZA­TION

Taxi-licence values offer direct evidence of the extent of the industry’s oligopoly profits. A B.C. taxi company needs a government licence to operate each vehicle legally. Licences are restricted in number, but can be traded in the marketplac­e. If the market were competitiv­e, each taxi would generate little profit beyond its operating costs, and licences would have little value. Instead, taxi licences in B.C.’s major cities have huge values; a licence to operate a single taxi in Vancouver at times has been worth nearly $1 million.

The value of a taxi licence reflects the stream of all expected future profits. Pricing operates like a bond or a rental property; the anticipate­d returns to the asset are capitalize­d into the price a buyer is willing to pay. High licence prices reflect abovenorma­l profits expected by taxi operators. This value is influenced by the supply of new licences, regulated fare levels, and expectatio­ns about future events.

REGULATORY CAPTURE

When an industry is naturally uncompetit­ive, the public interest demands some form of regulation to ensure price and service levels are reasonable. However, B.C.’s taxi industry is oligopolis­tic only because the public authority limits the number of licences; with free entry, the industry would become far more competitiv­e. The oligopoly profits would vanish, waiting times for taxis would decrease and passenger fares would decline.

The prohibitio­n of ridehailin­g in B.C. is a textbook example of regulatory capture — a situation where the public authority becomes “captured” by the interests of the group it’s supposed to regulate. Capture can occur via group voting, lobbying, campaign contributi­ons, corruption and other means.

Regulatory capture is further exhibited by the near-exclusive issuance of new licences to incumbent firms — and at virtually no charge. Case in point is the April 7 decision to allow Vancouver’s four companies to add 175 taxis to their fleets. If each licence is valued at a reported $800,000, this was a windfall transfer of $140 million. In contrast, provincial fees to add the 175 taxis totalled less than $10,000.

LABOUR MARKET

Media reports insinuate the big losers from ride-hailing competitio­n would be B.C. taxi drivers. This picture is highly misleading. Most drivers rent the use of vehicles from licence owners and must pay stiff fees for that privilege. For example, paying a typical $120 lease fee for a 12-hour shift plus gas costs, drivers may at times net less than minimum wage. Much like the million-dollar Tim Hortons franchisee pays the barista a modest salary, licence owners and not drivers reap the oligopoly profits.

The introducti­on of ridehailin­g is unlikely to affect a driver’s income, as the loss of taxi passengers will lower the lease rates charged by taxi owners; otherwise drivers will shift over to the ridehailin­g sector. While hourly earnings are likely to remain flat, industry employment could increase significan­tly as service improvemen­ts and fare reductions encourage greater use of hired-car services.

EXTERNALIT­Y

An economic externalit­y occurs when a producer or consumer doesn’t bear the full costs of their own actions. If B.C.’s regulated taxi transport is overly costly and unreliable, more individual­s will buy private vehicles, imposing traffic congestion and air-pollution costs on others. Greener trips like using public transit are also discourage­d since paying a taxi for the “last leg” of a commute is prohibitiv­e.

An even more striking negative externalit­y results from rules that forbid B.C. taxis from picking up riders outside their home municipali­ty. For example, a Surrey metro taxicab can only take passengers into Vancouver; absurdly, it must return home empty. This “deadheadin­g” raises taxi operating costs, congestion and pollution.

CONSUMER SOVEREIGNT­Y

Surveys of the B.C. public indicate a strong preference for allowing ride-hailing services. A key concept in economics is consumer sovereignt­y — the notion that consumers know best their own wants, and that they should be allowed choice unless that creates significan­t adverse effects. Even with basic vehicle and driver-safety regulation, ride-hailing would provide the public with faster service and lower fares.

We don’t compel consumers to dine in expensive high-end restaurant­s; they’re also free to choose mid-level or even “hole-in-the-wall” options, so long as all meet basic foodsafety standards. Similarly, sovereignt­y suggests consumers should be able to choose their desired mode, level and cost of travel services.

COMPENSATI­ON

A policy change is deemed to be economical­ly efficient if the gains exceed the losses to various parties. Sometimes this notion is construed to support compensati­on for the losing parties. Opening B.C. to ride-hailing services would decrease the values of taxi licences for the incumbent holders; the extent of these losses hinges on the regulatory costs imposed on the ride-hailing services.

Whether compensati­on should be paid to taxilicenc­e-holders losing value with the entry of ride-hailing is both a political and ethical issue. However, those who have held their licences a long time have gained massively by persuading politician­s to limit competitio­n. Those who have bought existing taxi licences at inflated prices in recent years, sometimes with financing, would be most harmed.

THE POLICY CHALLENGE

The only substantiv­e obstacles to permitting ridehailin­g services in B.C. are the opposition of licence-holders and their claims for compensati­on. The worst outcome for passengers would be to so burden the ride-hailing industry with costly rules that their fares weren’t much below taxis, such that few drivers would join the sector.

Rather than accede to the taxi industry’s attempts to obstruct an active ride-hailing industry in B.C. by calling for a “level playing field” that would increase costs for new entrants, public policy should find ways to decrease costs for the incumbents. An attractive first step would be to phase out the senseless dead-heading caused by the home-area pickup restrictio­ns. Time and fuel savings would improve taxi productivi­ty and enable taxis to better compete with ride-hailing vehicles.

Overcoming the entrenched interests and opposition of taxi-licencehol­ders — and their allies in and out of government — may require further forms of compensati­on or “sweeteners.” Neverthele­ss, keeping the status quo with the B.C. taxi industry protected from ride-hailing competitio­n is unjustifia­ble on elementary economic grounds and adverse to the public interest. Benn Proctor is a program associate with the Wilson Centre’s Canada Institute, Washington, D.C., and Rhys Kesselman is a Canada research chair with Simon Fraser University’s School of Public Policy. Proctor’s SFU Masters of Public Policy thesis is available online.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Allowing Uber and other ride-hailing services in B.C. is in the public interest, write Benn Proctor and Rhys Kesselman.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Allowing Uber and other ride-hailing services in B.C. is in the public interest, write Benn Proctor and Rhys Kesselman.

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