Related: Shanghai raises cab fares to offset fuel costs
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A man directs taxies lined up at
the Shanghai Hongqiao Airport. The price of each additional kilometer will
also rise slightly from 2 yuan to 2.1 yuan, the Shanghai Price Bureau
announces May 10, 2006.(Photo: Shanghai
Daily) |
SHANGHAI, May 11 -- A TAXI ride to the office or home
will cost more starting Thursday as Shanghai city has approved its first fare
increase since 1998.
The base fee, which covers the first three kilometers
of a trip, will increase to 11 yuan (US$1.36) from 10 yuan during the day, while
the price after 11pm will jump to 14 yuan from the current 13 yuan.
The price of each additional kilometer will also rise
slightly from 2 yuan to 2.1 yuan, with the final fare rounded up or down, the
Shanghai Price Bureau announced Wednesday.
In the city's suburbs, the first three kilometers
will cost 9 yuan, up from the previous 8 yuan, and each additional kilometer
will cost an additional 0.1 yuan.
According to the bureau's calculations, the overall
price hike is 6.7 percent, and passengers will have to pay 1.4 yuan more for
each trip on average.
The city will begin adjusting the meters on the
45,000 taxis in Shanghai today, but that work won't be complete until the end of
the month.
The increase is the direct result of a newly enforced
mechanism that allows taxi fares to float with fuel prices to counter the
influence of rising gas prices on the taxi industry and drivers.
In March, the price of gasoline and diesel fuel rose
more than 5 percent on the back of major increases in the cost of international
crude oil.
The city held a public hearing in the middle of last
month to summon opinions from taxi drivers, taxi company officials, and riders
for the mechanism, which they believe will help deal with any future fluctuation
in fuel prices.
"The increase will ensure taxi drivers' incomes are
not affected, but will not raise the taxi companies' profits," said bureau
director Wu Zhenguo, stressing fares could also drop if oil prices recede.
Next month, the government and taxi companies will
stop paying subsidies to drivers. Currently they pay more than 800 yuan a month
for each car, which are normally shared by two drivers.
Cab companies will also lower the rental price they
charge drivers for their cars. Currently the fee is 9,800 yuan or even higher a
month for one car. The bureau set a future ceiling price of 9,500 yuan a month.
The new fare mechanism means no public hearing will
be needed for future price changes, but fare won't change more than once a year
unless gas prices fluctuate wildly.
While cab drivers seem pleased with the fare
increase, some working in the suburbs are worried they will have a tougher time
competing with unlicensed cabs, which already charge lower fares.
Bureau officials say they will step up their efforts
in helping legal cab companies in the suburbs, where "black cabs" are prominent.
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(Source: Shanghai Daily) |