{"id":3625,"date":"2016-04-20T15:09:47","date_gmt":"2016-04-20T09:39:47","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.indiauncut.com\/?p=3983"},"modified":"2016-04-20T15:09:47","modified_gmt":"2016-04-20T09:39:47","slug":"uber-and-the-auto-driver","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/indiauncut.com\/uber-and-the-auto-driver\/","title":{"rendered":"Uber and the Auto-Driver"},"content":{"rendered":"

As readers of this blog would know, I’ve long argued in favour of Uber’s surge pricing as an excellent mechanism for matching supply and demand. In a column from last year<\/a>, I warned against the perils of banning surge pricing:<\/p>\n

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The most efficient way of allocating resources is to let things find their own equilibrium, their own prices. Price controls are foolish and never work. And the demand for them is based on a sort of a fantasy. Fixing the price of a product at a base price below what the market would pay does not mean that everyone gets it at this price—it just means that a lucky few get it and the others don’t. The fundamental truth about the universe is this: everything is scarce. You can’t wish this scarcity away by agitating or legislating against it.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

Now, these fundamental laws of economics apply to everything, not just to Uber. And so Mukul Kesavan, in a column for NDTV<\/a>, makes the pertinent point:<\/p>\n

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[S]etting aside Kejriwal’s motives and rationality, the larger question is this: should Uber or Ola be allowed to vary their per kilometre rate at will when yellow cabs and auto-rickshaws are stuck with fixed rates? If, as Uber’s defenders never tire of saying, the app’s algorithms represent the invisible hand of the market, frictionlessly matching supply and demand, why should the individual auto-driver be punished and maligned for asking for more than the metered price?<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

Shoaib Daniyal makes the same point on Twitter:<\/p>\n

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Good to gripe about Uber restriction—but why did no one notice the massive cab and auto fare regulation in place for a century?<\/p>\n

— Shoaib Daniyal (@ShoaibDaniyal) April 20, 2016<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n