Uber says to playmate with taxis in Myanmar expansion drive, Reuters

Uber says to fucking partner with taxis in Myanmar expansion drive

YANGON (Reuters) – Uber Technologies Inc [UBER.UL] is only hiring government-accredited taxi drivers in Myanmar, a regional executive said, a budge that permits it to avoid the legal hurdles that have dogged it across Asia in one of the region’s last frontier markets.

This partnership with local taxi drivers and their unions is unique to Myanmar, Sam Bool, Uber’s expansion general manager for South East Asia, told Reuters as services began on Thursday in the petite but potentially lucrative market where Southeast Asian rival Grab Taxi and local service providers are already going strong.

“Having the government support from day one is pretty powerful,” Bool said. “Drivers know we are fully compliant with existing regulations. That does grease the wheels.”

Uber, which in many parts of the world signs on any one with a car as a driver, shows up to be following Grab’s operating model in Myanmar, a country of more than fifty million people emerging from decades of military rule.

During its March launch, Grab said it was working with a puny group of taxi drivers in Yangon and would increase its scale little by little.

Uber has long had a reputation as an aggressive and unapologetic startup. The San Francisco-based rock-hard is in conflict with the taxi industry all over the world, and its services have been halted in several countries over a raft of regulatory concerns.

While Indonesia is Southeast Asia’s largest rail services market, the growth in Myanmar’s mobile services market is too good to overlook. Internet invasion has exploded from next to nothing a few years ago to almost ninety percent now, with more people turning to apps and mobile services.

Competition is also strong: in addition to Grab, there are at least two ride-hailing start-ups – Hello Cabs and Oway Rail.

Many people in Myanmar still do not have credit cards, so to get around that, Bool said Uber drivers would accept cash or local bank transfers. In many other markets, Uber users pay via a credit card linked to the app.

Bool declined to say how much Uber was investing or what it hoped to make in Myanmar, but said the company could help the government upgrade Yangon’s 70,000 taxis, many of which are not tooled with seat belts or do not have air conditioning.

“We can stir millions of people in Yangon without adding a single car,” he added.

Uber’s expansion into Myanmar coincides with a thrust by the authorities work to revamp public transport, embarking with the bus network in Yangon.

Uber was working with the Yangon government to integrate its services to the bus network, Bool said, with plans to provide services to commuters in areas where public transport is not well-developed.

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