GrabBike
drivers stage strike over new commission ratio in Ho Chi Minh City
Drivers left the strike disappointed after no agreement was
made
GrabBike drivers on
strike are seen in
Scores of GrabBike drivers in
The
on-strike drivers turned off their app and flocked to Grab Vietnam’s
One
driver, Thanh, told Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper that Grab Vietnam hiked the commission ratio, which it calls an
‘app usage fee,’ from 20 percent to 23.6 percent on January 1.
GrabBike
is the motorbike taxi service, locally known as ‘xe om,’ owned and operated
by Grab, which also offers taxi-like GrabCar and shipping service
GrabExpress.
Like
other ride-sharing apps, Grab splits the revenue earned from each ride with
its drivers, who it refers to as ‘partners.’
The
new ‘app usage fee’ means GrabBike drivers will have to pay Grab Vietnam 23.6
percent of the fare for each ride he or she completes.
“This
is unreasonably high and we have decided to go on strike to show our protest
against the new policy,” Thanh told Tuoi
Tre.
Hundreds
of drivers gathered at the Sala urban area on
Grab
The
ride-sharing service told drivers that it will solve the problem on a
case-by-case basis, and any further complaints will be addressed next week.
Of
course, the drivers left the strike disappointed.
Grab
Drivers
are supposed to pay taxes on the 80 percent of revenue they receive from each
ride. With a tax rate of 4.5 percent, this translates into 3.6 percent of the
total fare.
This
means that for every ride, a driver will now have 20 percent of the revenue
deducted as payment for the ‘app using fee’, and an additional 3.6 percent
for personal income tax coverage.
As
part of its support policy, Grab Vietnam sometimes gives cash bonus or
monetary support to drivers who have excellent performance or who work during
rush or late-night hours.
The
company said this support, based on driver revenue, is now subject to a one
percent tax deduction, and other bonuses have a ten percent deductible.
This
is a double whammy for drivers, as “Grab has significantly reduced such
support for us,” a GrabBike driver named Nguyen Tuan told Tuoi Tre.
“While
the bonuses decreased, the share we have to pay Grab for each ride just rose,
putting us in a hard place,” he said.
“If
[Grab] refuses to reduce the commission ratio, we will switch to [working
for] other apps.”
Grab
The
company said a driver will have to pay the tax if he makes more than VND100
million (US$4,405) a year, or VND8.3 million ($366) a month.
Grab
By
the end of every month, if drivers’ total earning, including revenue and
bonuses, is below the VND8.3 million threshold, they will be refunded the
temporarily deducted tax payment by the tenth day of the following month,
according to the company.
If
the drivers make more than that benchmark, the temporary deduction will
become official tax payment.
The
explanation does not please the drivers, who say it is unreasonable to
mandate the upfront deduction.
“The
current ride fare is already dirt cheap and the higher commission ratio only
puts more pressure on us drivers,” Tuan said.
“This
is not to mention that Grab Vietnam continues to recruit new drivers,
increasingly making the market more crowded.”
For
instance, it costs only VND33,000, or less than $1.5, to travel the 7km route
from Ben Thanh Market in District 1 to
Tuan
also revealed that drivers now have to pay VND400,000 ($17) to buy a GrabBike
uniform, as well as a VND20,000 ‘app maintenance’ fee, both of which used to
be free.
“We
could not understand why Grab set the commission ratio too high, while we
have to cover all expenses, from fuel and mobile data to bike maintenance and
repairs,” Tuan said.
Grab made its
Since
then, the Malaysia-based company has adjusted its registered capital five
times, totaling VND20 billion as of March 2017, according to
In
2014, Grab Vietnam logged losses of VND51.6 billion ($2.27 million).
The
company managed to take that number to VND441.8 billion ($19.46 million) and
VND444.7 billion ($19.59 million) in 2015 and 2016, respectively.
The
finance ministry attributed the steep losses to massive
marketing expenses and service prices set deliberately low to undercut
conventional taxi operators.
Tuoi Tre News
|
Thứ Năm, 11 tháng 1, 2018
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