Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto Subway Shutdown Puts Uber's Surge Pricing Model In Spotlight

The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2015 11:16 AM
    TORONTO — As thousands of Toronto commuters found themselves stranded during the morning rush hour Monday following a massive subway disruption, Uber's surge pricing kicked into effect.
     
    Under surge-pricing, also known as dynamic pricing, the ride-hailing service uses an algorithm to lure more drivers to areas where demand is particularly high by increasing the rates in those areas.
     
    The practice has incited controversy among some users who have called it "price gouging."
     
    Some tweeted that Uber was charging up to four times the usual rate in some parts of the city.
     
    But Uber spokeswoman Susie Heath says that as soon as the company became aware of the transit shutdown, it capped its dynamic pricing at three times the normal rate.
     
    Heath says Uber always communicates to users that surge pricing is in effect.
     
    "Dynamic pricing solves for the perennial challenge of never being able to get a ride on New Year's Eve, after a major sporting event or during bad weather," said Heath.
     
     
    "Because Uber doesn't employ drivers, every driver has a choice of how he or she spends his or her time. Dynamic pricing helps bring demand and supply into line, when necessary, by incentivizing more drivers to come onto the platform. Once demand falls or supply increases sufficiently, prices quickly go back to normal."
     
    Ian Lee, an assistant professor at Carleton's Sprott School of Business, says he's surprised at how some consumers have reacted to Uber's surge pricing.
     
    "It's simply good old-fashioned supply and demand," said Lee. "There's no evil person sitting behind a computer screen trying to exploit people. It's purely using an algorithm in the software ... that says if there's an imbalance between the demand for Uber taxes and supply of Uber taxis, the software prices you upwards."
     
    Lee says a number of other industries — including airlines, hotels and car rental companies — also use dynamic pricing but are simply less transparent about it.
     
    "When you fly to Europe, you pay a lot more going in the summer time than you do going in the winter," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Conducting Montreal Raids Believed Linked To Radicalization Probe

    MONTREAL — The RCMP is conducting Montreal-area raids that are believed to be linked to a radicalization investigation.

    RCMP Conducting Montreal Raids Believed Linked To Radicalization Probe

    Former NHL Enforcer Pleads Guilty To Assault, Three Driving Charges In B.C.

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A former NHL enforcer has pleaded guilty to an assault charge and three charges of driving while prohibited in separate incidents last year in Kamloops and Merritt, B.C.

    Former NHL Enforcer Pleads Guilty To Assault, Three Driving Charges In B.C.

    Hundreds Attend Memorial For 11-Year-Old Girl Slain On Northern Manitoba Reserve

    Hundreds Attend Memorial For 11-Year-Old Girl Slain On Northern Manitoba Reserve
    WINNIPEG — More than 200 mourners have attended a memorial service in Winnipeg for an 11-year-old girl whose partial remains were found on a northern Manitoba reserve.

    Hundreds Attend Memorial For 11-Year-Old Girl Slain On Northern Manitoba Reserve

    Winnipeg Woman Sent Home In Cab Had Trouble Breathing In Hospital: Nurse

    WINNIPEG — A woman who died hours after being sent home in a cab from a Winnipeg hospital was too ill to undergo diagnostic testing the day she was released.

    Winnipeg Woman Sent Home In Cab Had Trouble Breathing In Hospital: Nurse

    Wildfires Force About 4,000 People To Evacuate Homes In Northern Alberta

    Wildfires Force About 4,000 People To Evacuate Homes In Northern Alberta
    Wildfires have forced about 4,000 people from their homes in north- central Alberta but officials don't believe any houses have been lost.

    Wildfires Force About 4,000 People To Evacuate Homes In Northern Alberta

    Residents Of Flooded B.C. Village Offered Disaster Financial Aid From Province

    Residents Of Flooded B.C. Village Offered Disaster Financial Aid From Province
    With shovels and wheelbarrows, backhoes and dump trucks, residents of Cache Creek, B.C., spent Monday scooping up and hauling away mud and debris deposited across their community by a devastating weekend flood.

    Residents Of Flooded B.C. Village Offered Disaster Financial Aid From Province