* This is my column in BusinessWorld last August 15, 2018.
UNTIL five years ago, the Philippines had the lowest
registered vehicles ratio per population in the whole of North and Southeast
Asia. It only had 79 registered vehicles per 1,000 population.
Indonesia and Vietnam had more than five times that
number, Thailand more than six times and Malaysia had ten times more vehicles
than the Philippines. Bulk of these countries’ vehicles though are two- and
three-wheeled, like motorcycles and tricycles/tuktuk (see table).
These numbers indicate two implications for the
Philippines.
One, our numbers were understated because many vehicles
here were not registered with the government — LGUs for tricycles and
kuligligs, and LTFRB for motorcycles, cars, jeeps, buses, etc.
What does this imply?
Many vehicle owners no longer bother to register their
vehicles because doing so involve complicated and expensive procedures
involving national and local bureaucracies.
Two, the Philippines has high reliance on limited public
transportation — tricycles, jeepneys, buses, UV express, MRT/LRT.
Land transport modernization and the bureaucracy
Compare this with Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea.
All these three countries offer convenient rail-based
mass transportation but they still have high vehicle to population ratios.
This is probably because vehicle owners aren’t
discouraged by lengthy and tedious bureauractic procedures when they register their
vehicles.
That situation is far removed from the way the Land
Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) regulates transport
network vehicle services (TNVS) or transport network companies (TNCs).
Last week, the agency reiterated its fare
“rationalization and streamlining” TNVSs and TNCs.
As a result, fares which it deems “non-rational” will be
disallowed and in the process, innovation and modernization by private players
will be discouraged.
Commuters are generally rational people.
Those who choose to ride TNVS are those with specific
needs, not the LTFRB officials and bureaucrats who ride in taxpayer-funded
vehicles and gasoline/transportation allowance.
No one put a gun to force commuters to ride “expensive”
ride-sharing vehicles — they do so because they have specific needs (i.e.,
they’re either carrying huge amounts of cash, important documents, or equipment
or must rush a patient to a hospital emergency).
So when LTFRB continues with its fare control policy like
disallowing per minute charging in heavy traffic or flooded streets, they
discourage the supply of vehicles in those areas where demand for such
transportation is high. LTFRB is the agency to penalize commuters and trap them
in those areas.
Also last week, the Philippine Competition Commission
(PCC) has approved the Grab-Uber deal but imposed several conditions under
“Commitment Decision” with high penalties for any violation.
Among the conditions are:
• service quality, pricing (Grab to bring back market
averages for acceptance and cancellation rates before acquiring Uber, penalty
up to P2M in routes with extraordinary deviation from minimum allowed fares);
• fare transparency (show breakdown per trip including
distance, fare surges, discounts, promo reductions, per-minute waiting);
• removal of “see destination” feature especially for
drivers with low ride acceptance rate;
• driver/operator non-exclusivity (Grab will not
introduce policy that will prevent drivers and operators from operating with
other TNCs);
• improvement plan, particularly to enhance driver
performance; adopt drivers’ and passengers’ codes of conduct; establish a Grab
driver academy, welfare and rewards programs.
I think the better option for the PCC is to talk to
LTFRB, DoTr, SEC, etc. and ask how other big global and regional players like
Lyft, Didi, GoJek can come to the Philippines and compete with Grab. Or how to
hasten the merger of existing new but small players so that they become big
soon and compete with Grab.
If PCC makes the business harder and more bureaucratic
for Grab, that is a signal for other big players like Lyft and GoJek to think
twice going into the Philippine market. They put big money, time, and resources
here and they can be subjected to difficult and bureaucratic conditions like
what the LTFRB and PCC are doing to Grab now — why bother to invest here?
Let Grab and new domestic players introduce various
innovation in pricing and marketing, show the other big players abroad that if
they do business here, government will not over-bureaucratize them. They will
be allowed to do many things except to use their accredited vehicles to commit
crime or terrorism.
Government should step back from increased fare and price
control and allow the customers penalize the abusive and greedy players by
boycotting them and move to other bigger, more efficient players.
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See also:
BWorld 237, The sharing economy index, August 03, 2018
BWorld 238, Trademark ban and health alarmism, August 4, 2018
BWorld 239, Dutertenomics' debt addiction, August 12, 2018
BWorld 240, IMO, coal dependence and renewables lobby, August 19, 2018
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