Anyone done much research on this issue, and can link to something more scholarly in nature vs these types of articles below?https://jalopnik.com/taxis-drivers-in-new-york-city-are-taking-their-own-liv-1826369292https://www.npr.org/2018/02/10/584757778/taxi-drivers-face-financial-crisis
5/28/2018 7:32:31 PM
I read the one drivers suicide note linked in that NRP article, and perhaps saying this is simply a taxi vs ridesharing service debate isn't completely accurate. In NYC at least there seemed to be existing issues before ridesharing showed up.[Edited on May 28, 2018 at 7:40 PM. Reason : https://m.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=1888367364808997&id=100009072541151]
5/28/2018 7:39:58 PM
When middle class people are forced to invest so much capital into tiny pieces of metal (Medallions) it can absolutely wipe them out when they later need to change professions. There is value in maintaining the free flow of workers between industries. Excessive occupational licensing is harmful in general. The Medallion system is that on steroids. Perverse policies have very real consequences for people's lives.
5/28/2018 8:42:56 PM
A far better policy would have been to not limit the supply of Medallions. Allow the taxi workforce to grow, supplying taxi services to more areas (under-served minority areas, especially) and hopefully shifting the demand curves so New Yorkers use more taxis and fewer parking spaces. The increased supply would have also caused taxi wages to fall to match prevailing wages, although the diversion of workers to taxi drivers will drive up prevailing wages everywhere else. And then we wouldn't have this problem today of hard workers trapped in a dying business model loosing their life savings.
5/28/2018 9:14:35 PM
So a medallion is basically a license to operate a cab in NYC. I've never heard of this prior to your post synapse. And it sounds like the cost of a medallion is based on the taxi market at the time? Below is a pretty good NYT article that talks about medallions:https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/10/nyregion/new-york-taxi-medallions-uber.htmlIt is a sad situation for all of those cab drivers, and I want to hate Uber, I really do, but it is hard for me because Uber is just progress. This is another example of an industry failing to read the tea leaves and see what is coming. This is no different that data center service providers losing all of their business to AWS, Azure, and O365. This is no different than the hardware industry being turned upside down by the big-box stores.I do wonder how the taxi industry could have saved itself against Uber, and I don't have a good answer. Maybe come out with apps of their own that let them hail cabs? Maybe they have that now, I don't know. Maybe the regulators allowed too many cabs to operate? It sounds like one solution here would be for the city to help buy out the medallions where people are under water on them, then allow those people to go drive for Uber themselves. As you guys are aware I'm not a huge fan of government assistance but it sounds like the government is part of the blame.
5/28/2018 9:15:24 PM
the government is to blame, but only because they did what the taxi drivers wanted them to do. they concocted the medallion bullshit to protect themselves. now that the free market has come up with an end-around and their precious medallions are falling in value, they want to blame regulation.
5/28/2018 10:18:05 PM
The idea around the medallion is fine. When the price balloons to 1.3 million dollars you start having problems.[Edited on May 28, 2018 at 10:30 PM. Reason : Also our buddy Michael Cohen owns or owned quite a few of these things]
5/28/2018 10:28:54 PM
it’s very easy to hate UberLYFT 4 LYFE
5/28/2018 11:53:44 PM
Cabs have an app you can use to hail them in NYC. Also blacks car services have been in New York forever. I used to call them before Uber existed bc there weren’t a ton of cabs in Brooklyn in 2007-10. Now most black car guys also have an Uber, Lyft and Juno going.
5/29/2018 12:06:04 AM
5/29/2018 12:23:45 AM
5/29/2018 12:35:42 AM
5/29/2018 12:35:47 AM
^ This thread is about the ridesharing industry's impact on the legacy taxi industry, not rjrumple's simplification of the former into a single company, which you didn't quote.
5/29/2018 12:59:56 AM
cool.[Edited on May 29, 2018 at 1:03 AM. Reason : .]
5/29/2018 1:02:30 AM
5/29/2018 1:57:40 AM
Just Google "taxi protectionism"
5/29/2018 6:26:18 AM
Not sure why you think my post was a simplification of the issue. I'm just citing Uber because I don't want to type out Uber and Lyft over and over again.If everyone is really worried about the medallion system, and NYC taxi drivers specifically, then why not require Lyft and Uber drives to also purchase a medallion before they can operate in the city? Why does Uber get to operate outside of the bounds of the medallion system?
5/29/2018 8:29:42 AM
Black car services have always operated outside of the medallion system.
5/29/2018 8:55:25 AM
Reminds me of that video with the pissed off lamplighters petitioning to get rid of street lights. You're obsolete. You've been replaced. Get over it. Adapt.
5/29/2018 9:05:28 AM
^are they really obsolete? They've been "replaced" by the exact same service but one with owners willing to operate at a massive loss to eliminate competition. Those services also get to ignore many/all safety regulations.
5/29/2018 9:13:05 AM
Don't ask me, ask the free market. They feel they're safe enough.
5/29/2018 11:33:34 AM
5/29/2018 12:48:30 PM
^^Bc the free market is inherently dumb. On the free market, corporations have no incentive to share enough information with the consumers to allow them to make informed decisions.The free market thought cars without seat belts were safe enoughTaxis probably aren't as safe as they could be bc of lax regulation enforcement, but at least there is some system of checks
5/29/2018 1:22:00 PM
5/29/2018 2:18:21 PM
You guys do not understand how NYC taxi's and car services work. Everyone is licensed by the city to drive anyone anywhere for money. You can not start up Uber and pick people up, you have to be licensed by the city.https://www1.nyc.gov/nycbusiness/description/black-car-base-license
5/29/2018 2:23:17 PM
^, ^^ok I may be operating on outdated or poor info, at least in NYC.
5/29/2018 3:02:27 PM
the entire "ridesharing" situation doesn't exist in NYC. You are still calling a licensed car, they just happen to be using an app provided by Uber/Lyft/Juno/Gett/whatever. Its not difficult to get your TLC license and there are still plenty of idiots driving around.https://www.uber.com/drive/new-york/the driverless car situation is going to really fuck everything up. Will you be able to hail a driverless car by raising your hand on the corner of 17th and 6th when you're late for a meeting and its raining?? Will this cause medallions to go back up? who knows![Edited on May 29, 2018 at 3:21 PM. Reason : edit]
5/29/2018 3:13:15 PM
5/29/2018 5:47:19 PM
5/29/2018 8:23:43 PM
I disagree. Car services were in Nyc before Uber. Instead of calling a car I can now use an app. It’s the same guys driving the cars.What has happened is more people in Manhattan use car services now as opposed to looking for a taxis. In the boroughs is was a reality that already existed bc taxi drivers are dricks and won’t drive to Brooklyn.
5/29/2018 10:57:48 PM
the mob is mad they aren't getting their cut anymore.
5/30/2018 4:59:55 PM
sad point: I think the mob is still getting their cut. The cab drivers are just working for free.
6/1/2018 1:58:53 PM
6/2/2018 1:04:55 PM
https://jalopnik.com/a-sixth-new-york-city-taxi-driver-has-committed-suicide-1826877827
6/16/2018 11:02:31 AM
https://nypost.com/2018/10/06/uber-driver-who-jumped-in-front-of-train-was-deeply-in-debt/
10/8/2018 1:23:15 PM
I tend to agree that municipalities are partly to blame.They didn't see these companies coming, and once they did, they couldn't react fast enough. And still aren't reacting.Not the thread for it, but it does include the gig economy - these municipalities are also not responding to these damned scooter companies fast enough. People are going to start getting hurt on these things if something isn't done. I've seen pedestrians on sidewalks almost hit, I've seen idiots ride down the wrong way on a one way road, and I've nearly hit one blasting across the street out of nowhere.I find it ludicrous that bikes can't ride on a sidewalk but these stupid scooters can.
10/8/2018 1:29:47 PM
here ya go rj - message_topic.aspx?topic=649672&page=1#16505192
10/8/2018 2:27:02 PM
If they had it to do over again, New York should have set taxi rates by medallion prices. As medallion prices go up, taxi fares go down. But, of course, political choice theory teaches us this was a captured industry, so they'd never do anything to jeopardize the bubble in medallion prices.
10/8/2018 4:22:03 PM
http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/12/will-uber-survive-the-next-decade.html[Edited on December 7, 2018 at 11:25 AM. Reason : .]
12/7/2018 11:24:53 AM
Another example of the "mega-rich capitalist class" loosing their shirts to competition in a competitive market. This is the heart of Capitalism: capitalists loosing their investments while consumers prosper through lower prices. Thank you for bringing it to our attention
12/7/2018 4:18:17 PM
12/7/2018 4:30:27 PM
what? this is an example of the rich destroying an industry to replace it with something that is ultimately unsustainable, just by pumping money into it.literal proof of the inefficiencies of capitalism. did you read the article?[Edited on December 7, 2018 at 4:37 PM. Reason : .]
12/7/2018 4:37:06 PM
^^ thank you for the correction. ^ Destroying what industry? Like the article says, Uber is losing money because of stiff competition from competitors copying their model. This is what happens in a free market. And if Uber ceases operations in bankruptcy, there are dozens of competitors ready and eager to take its place. That is the beauty of Free Enterprise: One Firm is not the whole industry. Even the largest firm can fold due to incompetence or dumb luck, the industry will survive and prosper without them. The workers and customers of the industry are profiting, which is the purpose of Capitalism. Nothing inefficient about that.
12/7/2018 11:48:19 PM
12/7/2018 11:57:21 PM
12/8/2018 1:54:36 AM
Dead because Uber pumped billions of dollars of venture capital into a competing model that, 10 years later, is still far from being profitable. That's the point of the article.Lonesnark says this is competition, but how? The services aren't competing at real market prices. Uber is subsidizing its price in order to force the taxi industry into collapse. They'll eventually need to raise prices in order to make a profit, and at that point they'll likely be more expensive than taxis were in the first place.[Edited on December 8, 2018 at 10:23 AM. Reason : .]
12/8/2018 10:10:26 AM
LoL. If only businesses were able to raise prices "Just because they need to." That isn't how things work. As the article states very clearly, Uber has lots of competitors in the ridesharing market that are carrying along just fine right now. If Uber could charge more, they would. They're not losing money because they love their customers and want to give all their money away. They're losing money because Lyft and the other 9 such competitors in the same market are fierce competitors. If Uber decided they couldn't lose any more money and jacked up their prices to break even, they'd lose even more money as they'd soon find themselves with almost no customers at all. Read your own article again. Under the rules up until now, Uber is kinda doomed to provide cheap transport to us at a loss forever. Their investors are hoping that the rules change in the future, and they certainly seem right to believe they will. Just as the big players in the Taxi industry eventually gained strong protections against competition from the government, it is sorta the nature of government that Uber will get similar protections. Why, just recently New York just passed a "ridesharing driver minimum wage" that is a price floor by just another name. No doubt Uber's lawyers already know how to gently twist this law into a "only ridesharing companies big enough to afford the overhead" limit on competition. Get it down to the big three (taxis, Lyft, and Uber) and prices will rise enough to guaratee Uber plenty of profits.
12/10/2018 12:37:50 AM
I also can't help but chuckle at the "Uber isn't running its service at real market rates!" line. Well, medallions weren't being sold at their real market value, either, and taxis weren't running at real market rates as well... I'm with LS: I highly doubt Uber is slashing prices and losing massive amounts of money, just for shits and giggles. They could raise their rates to whatever you feel is the "real market rate," and still be cheaper and better than NYC taxis.
12/10/2018 1:30:48 AM