Economists have always
been fond of Uber. Its willingness to battle incumbents, use of
technology to match buyers and sellers, and embrace of “surge” pricing
to balance supply and demand make the ride-hailing giant a dismal
scientist’s dream. Steven Levitt, the author of the bestselling
“Freakonomics”, called it “the embodiment of what the economists would
like the economy to look like”. But if economists subjected Uber and its
competitors to a cost-benefit analysis, they might not be so impressed.
This might surprise customers. A study in 2016 by researchers from
Oxford University, the University of Chicago and Uber itself found
sizeable benefits from ride-hailing services for consumers. Using data
from 48m Uber trips taken in four American cities in 2015, they
estimated the difference between how much customers were willing to pay
and their actual fare. Each $1 spent on UberX rides generated a “consumer surplus” of $1.60. Across America, that surplus was estimated to be $6.8bn a year.
Drivers
also benefit. Few sign up for lack of anything else, as is true of some
gig work: in America roughly eight in ten have left another job to get
behind the wheel. The typical American Uber driver makes $16 per hour
($10 after expenses), higher than the federal minimum wage. In London
earnings after expenses come to £11 ($14) per hour and a recent survey
found Uber drivers reporting higher levels of life satisfaction on
average than other workers.
But against these benefits, there are
costs to weigh. Far from reducing congestion by encouraging people to
give up their cars, as many had hoped, ride-hailing seems to increase
it. Bruce Schaller, a transport consultant, estimates that over half of
all Uber and Lyft trips in big American cities would otherwise have been
made on foot or by bike, bus, subway or train. He reckons that
ride-hailing services add 2.8 vehicle miles of driving in those cities
for every mile they subtract.
A new working paper by John Barrios of the University of Chicago and
Yael Hochberg and Hanyi Yi of Rice University spells out one deadly
consequence of this increase in traffic. Using data from the federal
transport department, they find that the introduction of ride-sharing to
a city is associated with an increase in vehicle-miles travelled,
petrol consumption and car registrations—and a 3.5% jump in fatal car
accidents. At a national level, this translates into 987 extra deaths a
year.
What could be done to tip the balance back to benefits
overall? “Congestion pricing is the most direct solution,” says Jonathan
Hall of the University of Toronto. Several cities, including London,
Stockholm and Singapore, have moved in this direction, charging drivers
for entering busy areas at peak hours. If ride-hailing firms tweaked
their pricing to encourage carpooling, that would help, too.
One
of the worst things a city can do, says Mr Barrios, is to cap the number
of ride-hailing cars on their streets, as New York did in August. That
marked a step back towards the days when barriers to entering the taxi
market were high and competition was low. A dismal outcome, as most
right-thinking economists would agree.
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