Beijing seems set to raise taxi fares from 1.6 yuan (20 US cents) to 2 yuan
(25 US cents) per kilometre.
At a public hearing yesterday, 56 per cent of attendees agreed to the pricing
plan, which aims to offset the impact of up-to-50 per cent hikes in fuel prices
since 2000.
The plan was submitted by the Beijing Municipal Transportation Bureau to the
city's pricing regulator earlier this month.
"We are trying to find a solution so that taxi companies, drivers and
passengers share the rising costs," said Ding Baosheng, director of the
transportation bureau.
Organized by the Beijing Municipal Commission of Development and Reform, the
hearing invited 25 representatives from business operators, drivers, consumers
and experts. Ten city residents attended the hearing as observers.
To reduce the impact of higher costs, taxi companies and the government have
been subsidizing drivers since 2000, said Hu Yongxin, manager of Xianglong Taxi
Company.
The subsidies range from 500 yuan (US$63) to 670 yuan (US$84) each month. But
when the new fares come into force, the subsidies will be lowered as drivers are
expected to benefit from the rising fares.
But according to Wang Qianhu from the China Consumers' Association, this
means "transferring the rising cost directly to consumers."
He criticized some companies for seeking compensation while conveniently
ignoring falling car prices, which have considerably reduced their operating
costs from a decade ago.
For example, a Jetta is sold at about 80,000 yuan (US$10,000), less than half
the price 10 years ago.
"I hope the pricing regulator takes all cost-related factors into account so
that the new pricing plan can be reasonable and acceptable to all sides," Wang
added.
Li Yong, a member of the municipal political consultative conference, said
raising taxi fares is not the only solution; the government should also consider
other energy-saving measures such as restricting the number of cruising taxis
and encouraging call taxis.
Many taxi drivers are reportedly opposed to the new pricing plan for fear the
rising fares will turn more customers away to unlicensed cabs, estimated at
72,000, compared to 66,000 licensed ones.
At a similar public hearing held in Shanghai this month, most participants
supported fare hikes.
But many suggested that local taxi companies shoulder more of the costs
rather than passing them on to passengers.
Fares have not been raised in Shanghai since 1998, but operation costs have
risen by up to 38 per cent, mostly because of soaring oil prices. The flag-down
fare is now 10 yuan (US$1.2) while the price per kilometre beyond 3 kilometres
is 2 yuan.
(China Daily 04/27/2006 page1)
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