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Taxis in the US are one of the most regulated services around, and they were still utterly atrocious.

Sure, they’re mandated to not refuse service, but you try getting picked up in Manhattan with a suitcase mid afternoon (when it’s obvious you’ll be taking the fixed fare to JFK in heavy traffic). To this day, the meter being “broken” is a tactic used in taxi strongholds like Las Vegas, even with this regulation.

The sweet spot for taxis was London, but I will go out of my way to avoid taking one lest I get forced to listen to the drivers views on Brexit for the entire ride.



> Taxis in the US are one of the most regulated services around, and they were still utterly atrocious.

Maybe the fact that they were the most regulated services around was exactly why they were atrocious. Regulation often erects barriers to competition. It's impossible for a regulatory body to spell out every way in which a company can be exploitive and disallow it. The only thing that prevents bad behavior is meaningful competition.

It was this regulatory body that limited the number of cabs that could be on the road at any given time and set "fair" meter pricing. What resulted was that if you lived in a poor isolated neighborhood, there would be no cabs willing to take you there or driving around to pick you up. Uber solved this pretty much overnight.


I did not speculate on the cause and effect - only the status quo circa ~2013-2014 pre-Uber.

Today though, Uber has definitely developed anti-competitive and frankly disgusting traits - they're just different ones to the taxi industry.


> Taxis in the US are one of the most regulated services around, and they were still utterly atrocious.

This assumes that “most regulated” correlates with less atrocious. Or that the intentions behind regulations are always good. Regulations can indeed makes things less atrocious, but other regulations can just as easily make things more atrocious. I’d argue that many taxi regulations were more the latter than the former. (I.e arbitrary limit on total number of taxi vehicles, while allowing an unlimited number of non-taxi vehicles)


> most regulated

As in most rules on the books, not in actually enforced rules I presume?


Enforced when corrupt politicos wanted to squeeze medallion owners.




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