edders23 wrote:
StuartW wrote:
It's a bit like your council guaranteeing taxi drivers £15 per hour just for turning up at the ranks. The ranks would be overflowing 24/7, and people would be queued outside council offices for new badges.
BUT this is exactly what uber are expecting to happen a large number of drivers switching from traditional PH firms to them for the benefits
Surely it's precisely the opposite - if they are genuinely offering drivers a lot more (rather than smoke and mirrors) then they'll have a problem paying the existing workforce, never mind an influx of new drivers from traditional PH firms.
Which is maybe why the minimum wage things looks like it's meaningless - it's just when drivers are on their way to a job and loaded, effectively, so it's no better than guaranteeing the minimum wage to a HC driver when he's on the way to a run and then while the meter is on. He'll easily exceed the minimum wage during that period, so the guarantee is meaningless, and it's the dead time during the rest of the shift that's more relevant to actual earnings.
It's a bit like me ranking up tomorrow night and earning £50 an hour profit when loaded up. But chances are I'd only have a couple of £5 runs all night at best, or maybe not even get a run at all. So I'm guaranteed £50 per hour when loaded up, but that's meaningless if the meter is only on for ten minutes during the shift, or if it isn't activated at all.
And my point about how it wouldn't work if the council guaranteed HC drivers £15 per hour just for ranking up is more or less confirmed by Uber's statement quoted by Sussex earlier:
Uber wrote:
“If drivers were entitled to the minimum wage for all the time they simply had the app open, this would result in set shifts and a drastic cut to the number of drivers who can earn with Uber, at a time when the UK needs more earnings opportunities not less.”
The bit in purple is effectively the PH equivalent of what I was saying about guaranteed money for HCs ranking. Realistically, it's just not sustainable.
And, as Uber states further (the bit in red) it would entail turning its business model upside down (and which in turn answers Edders' other point about whether Uber would limit drivers' hours).
So the minimum wage guarantee is meaningless, and I suspect the holiday entitlement thing isn't as generous as it sounds either.
So again it all seems more PR and making some relatively minor changes seems like a big difference.
And maybe a bit like Uber limiting the number of hours a driver was working, or something like that. Remember that? Can't recall the details, but I think it was just when they were driving, basically, so again was good PR, but in practical terms didn't mean much, if anything at all.
Of course, the irresistable force of Uber's PR juggernaut will eventually come up against the immoveable object of the rule of law. But this one will run and run, and it was never the case that Uber would be able to comply with the Supreme Court ruling via a few tweaks announced a few weeks afterwards.
And all that's even ignoring the VAT dimension. To comply with it all Uber is going to have to make very drastic changes to its the way it does business, and it's difficult to see how it can survive with anything like its current business model.
And, as usual, it would all be equally or even more fundamental to the more traditional trade if they had to comply as well.
But that too is something that won't be obvious for a while yet.