Driver and rider matching service Uber has brought us good
news and bad news, and not for the first time, for those at the lower end of
the sharing economy food chain, the good news does not apply. That is because
the only good news is the revision in Uber’s value – now
estimated at more than $40 billion. That is excellent news for those who
have invested in the venture.
However, and here we encounter a significantly sized
however, their number does not include the drivers, those who have invested
their own money in cars, only to find their rewards arbitrarily curtailed as
Uber has imposed price cuts – and therefore wage cuts – in the USA and UK. And
it does not include the customers, whose experience of the service has not
always been good.
Indeed, while CEO Travis Kalanick told of “significant growing pains”, and that “The events of the recent weeks have shown us
that we also need to invest in internal growth and change. Acknowledging
mistakes and learning from them are the first steps”, he may not have
foreseen the
recent event in New Delhi that has trashed Uber’s reputation across the
Indian sub-continent.
As NDTV noted, “With
one of its drivers arrested on rape charges and its executives to be questioned
today, Uber sent a text message today to other drivers, urging them to ‘stay
united’”. The message concluded “Uber
is not going anywhere”. Not going anywhere in another sense, too: “this afternoon, it was banned from
offering any services in and around Delhi by the capital's transport department”.
It gets worse: “the
police says that the company did not conduct a basic police record check for
the driver, Shiv Kumar Yadav, who was arrested last night in Uttar Pradesh ... A
young woman executive says he raped her on Friday night in an isolated part of
Delhi before abandoning her on the road near her home in North Delhi”.
Would Kalanick like to venture a comment here?
“We will work with the
government to establish clear background checks currently absent in their
commercial transportation licensing programs” pontificated the modern-day
Cornelius Vanderbilt, which, in not so many words, means that it was someone
else’s fault. Like insurance is someone else’s problem. Like regulations are
someone else’s problem. Except Trav and his gang cannot deflect this one.
Of course, Kalanick and his fellow investors could just work
within the rules that Uber’s competitors play by, but that is not the Uber way.
Rules are for Taxis, and Taxis are, in Trav’s own words “assholes”. When you start from the premise that rules are for
assholes, it is never going to end well. Robert Reich asked yesterday
“is Uber a $40 billion success story or a
dangerous scam”?
He might wish to ask that. I couldn’t possibly comment.
Hopefully its another myspace and will disappear when the investors see the naked King.
ReplyDeleteThe worry is how long before a UK citizen is subject to a similar horrific crime, then it will be more spotlight on Town Hall licencing departments and Police for not doing the checks, rather than the company which chooses to ignore rules.
Uber banned in Spain following Court case.
ReplyDelete