Kaiser Soze wrote:
I feel that the tariff at the moment is fair and certainly hasn't increased as much as inflation. Fuel and insurance continue to rise year in year out but only an 8% rise in 3 years for the Hackney drivers.
Your views are interesting though Skull.
The tariff isn't fair, because our customers are voting with their bums on others' seats. They don't think its fair or the discounters wouldn't be taking our work.
You can reduce your insurance costs by driving safely, rather than trying to race other cabbies to the next fare, and driving dangerously. Don't say it doesn't happen, I see it every night.
Even a huge 10% increase in fuel represents less than 2% cost against income. Well within the 8% quoted. And if fuel does cost more, its because we have to drive further to get a fare.
But if you think its bad then consider what its like for private hire. To get their 20% discounted fare they can be dragged long distances, from one side of the town to the other at busy times. Sorry, I forgot what the guru said, there are no drags in private hire, just next jobs.
Of course his income is assured because drivers pay it whether they're making money or not. It's not him and his cronies, (they even increased their demands on drivers in the depths of this recession by hiking their "tax" on contract jobs which are already heavily discounted and are precisely what the circuit fees are supposed to cover already) nor his controllers who are pulling drivers all over the town, who have to pay 25 pence per mile to drive to a 20% discounted fare that may just have hailed a black off the street because he took too long to get there.
In short, the tariff should be set at what the market will bear. That's market forces. It's what customers are prepared to pay.
And if the tariff is too high, and customers drift to the competition, then it needs to be reduced and the garages and insurance companies and fuel companies need to reduce their prices accordingly or, like us, they lose the work. That's market forces and what needs to happen in recession.
But our trade is unique. We hike fares beyond what our customers bear, we lose work, our income goes down, while those who charge us rentals don't reduce them, radio dues increase even though the jobs return diminishes, repairs still get to cost more rather than less and insurance costs increase too. Everyone's income is ring-fenced - apart from we serfs'.
Of course, we're at the bottom of the pile, aren't we? And, unfortunately, the ingrained subservience among drivers suggest we're just gonna languish there.