
Japan's taxi drivers feel squeeze
USA Today
TOKYO — You arrive at Narita International Airport after a long flight across the Pacific, exhausted and eager to get to your hotel in downtown Tokyo 40 miles away. The taxis waiting outside look inviting.
They gleam. Their interiors are spotless. Their seats are decorated with doilies and sheathed in plastic. The drivers wear immaculate uniforms and sometimes little caps. Their manners are impeccable. You're tempted to skip the bus or the train and take one of those taxis into town.
But unless you're a pampered CEO traveling on a bloated expense account, do not succumb to temptation: A one-way taxi ride from Narita to Hilton Tokyo in the city's Shinjuku district will set you back more than $200.
Three years ago, Japan deregulated its taxi industry, promising consumer-friendly competition. The results so far have been dismal for passengers. Japanese taxis remain the world's most expensive. But taxi drivers aren't reaping any benefits, either; they get poorer each year.
"Deregulation worked in the telephone industry and the railroad industry, but it doesn't work in the taxi industry," says Seiji Abe, a professor at Osaka's Kansai University who has studied taxi deregulation, Japanese-style....the rest...