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Gadkari Ends Need For Separate Driving Licence For Taxis. Next Stop: Freeing Private Cars To Run As Ola, Uber?

  • Apart from creating many job opportunities for people with driving licences, this move also takes the country one step forward towards ride-sharing and car-pooling instead of depending on personal transport vehicles which add to traffic congestion and pollution.

R JagannathanApr 19, 2018, 11:48 AM | Updated 11:48 AM IST

Road Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari speaks during an event at National Media Centre in New Delhi.  (Sonu Mehta/Hindustan Times via GettyImages) 


A huge source of illegal gratification and impediment to job creation will die an unsung death if states accept an advisory from the Union Road Transport Ministry to abandon the need for drivers to obtain commercial licences before piloting taxis, three-wheelers and two-wheelers for moving people and goods.

Currently, you may already have a driving licence, but to drive commercial vehicles like taxis you need a different licence. This process involves a lot of bribery and waits for as long as a year for people who want to make a living from commercial driving. Under the advisory sent by the ministry – which states have to agree to – only drivers of large commercial vehicles like trucks and buses need commercial licences. For the rest, the existing personal driving licences will do.

Apart from creating many job opportunities for people with driving licences, this move also takes the country one step forward towards ride-sharing and car-pooling instead of depending on personal transport vehicles which add to traffic congestion and pollution.

While ride-hailing apps like Uber and Ola are already making pooling a reality, the real challenge is to get car owners to use their vehicles commercially, thus reducing the need for every individual to own a car just to go from place A to B.

Moving away from excessive car ownership is vital to unclogging roads and this means existing underused private cars to become partly commercial, where drivers can be used both for personal movement and for making commercial trips to earn more money when the car is otherwise idle. Over time, this shift of private car ownership to commercial use will reduce vehicle congestion as more people use hybrid private-public vehicles. Private cars thus ought to be part-time supplements to full-time Ubers and Olas.

This shift, of course, will not happen all of a sudden, for car ownership has a status-enhancing angle to it as well. But most people do not buy cars only for status; they are substitutes for missing public transport. Women, especially, prefer cars precisely because they don’t want to be pushed around and harassed in crowded buses. If car-owners sense a commercial gain by allowing others to use their vehicles when they are not being used by them, they will do so.

One more change is required. The process of converting private licence plates to commercial ones ought to be made easy and stress-free. If this process can be done through a transparent online process, where higher fees are paid and authorisations for changing licence plates from white to yellow are given quickly (subject to vehicles being declared safe through certifications from well-established garages or car company-affiliated workshops), one more avenue for corruption and harassment will disappear.

The Road Transport Ministry under Nitin Gadkari is on the right path.

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