Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Hucksters and Angels, Part I

Integrity and Taxi Fares for Greenhorns

In my recent trek throughout Zambia, Malawi, and Tanzania I was reminded that traveling invariably spawns more frequent and memorable encounters with the nefarious and the noble than we usually experience in the humdrum of everyday life. Guess what? The occasional shameless New York cabbie that has refined the duping of unsuspecting out-of-towners into an art form has distant cousins in Zambia and Malawi.

I rode with one such relative in Chipata, Zambia, on a short taxi trip to the Malawian border. Cabs here are shared, so as to optimize fuel efficiency and maximize revenue. However, in Chipata I sniffed another revenue maximization scheme, charging inflated muzungu (white person) rates. I asked two passengers already sitting in the cab what fare they were paying. They had just spoken with the driver – uh, in Nyanja, not my strong suit. They casually responded with a fare twice what I’d just been quoted ten minutes before by another cabbie whose car I refused to enter because it was grossly overloaded. I took the ride aware that I might be getting hosed. Upon arriving at the border, the driver bounded out of the car and approached me to pay him before and quite a distance from any of the other passengers. After I paid him my mind involuntarily went to work trying to reason why what occurred felt so wrong, in principle. “What just happened?” I said to myself.

While walking across the border I asked a Malawian immigration officer what the fare should be for the next leg, to the bus station. “Three hundred fifty Malawian kwacha,” she said. When I got to the taxi rank a gaggle of cabbies was hanging out between the first two cars in line. “Three hundred fifty kwacha to the bus station,” I confidently said to the apparent driver of the head car. Shaking his head no, he countered with, “Five hundred kwacha.” I said, “No, not the “muzungu fare,” the fare you would pay for this trip.” The crowd smiled, and with all the sincerity they could muster protested on behalf of their buddy that I’d been quoted the correct fare. The “muzungu fare” they said, would be seven hundred or a thousand kwacha! Later I wished I’d come back with, “Ah, so we HAVE established that there IS a ‘muzungu fare,’ and it’s higher!” I laughed with them and decided I’d let them in on my little conversation with the immigration officer, about the legit fare being three fifty. It was as if I’d caught them with their pants down (when they were really on fire!). They were stunned! Addressing the most vocal guy with all the sincerity I could muster, I challenged the whole gang to help me confront the immigration officer for lying to me. Oops, they hadn’t planned on that response! What followed were snickers with sheepish grins and eyes averting my gaze, but no takers. I decided to have some fun with this and take the ride, literally and figuratively. As in the previous cab, I was shown the single bucket seat in front. We departed for the station once the driver found enough riders to give everyone in the car claustrophobia. Along the way a would-be rider waved us down. There was only room for him to squeeze up front with me. I turned to my friends in back and asked what fare they were paying. Deafening silence. I asked whether they were paying five hundred kwacha. Again, the only response I got was smiles and nervous laughter. They were on to the driver’s ruse but remained loyal to their countryman. I leaned over and quipped to the driver that now that I was sharing my seat, the fare should go down to three fifty. At the bus station the driver again zipped over to me first, for payment, again apart from the others riders. This time however, I refused to pay first, telling him I wanted to allow my fellow passengers to pay, so they could be on their way. I would wait patiently until he was done with them. That driver looked more like a “deer-in-the-headlights” than I thought humanly possible! That expression was priceless, well worth the cost of getting taken for a ride previously. If he wasn’t sure before, he now knew I was on to him. What would he do? Surely he suspected I would watch and listen as others paid. He slinked over to collect the fares from the others, knowing full well that there was no way on earth they would pay 143% of the going rate, even if they could afford it, which they probably couldn’t. I couldn’t tell from the hushed tones what was being said or how much they were paying. Finally, the driver came to me, and needing to save face said, “Since I had to put someone in the front seat with you, I’ll only charge you three fifty.”

Pricing for travelers can be more of a game or a dance than it is in everyday life, akin perhaps to buying a car in the States (which clearly is not an everyday purchase). Often enough, the game denies equality among buyers and discounts integrity among sellers. In Zambia and Malawi at least, on the sell side the game is based on the seller’s perception of a buyer’s economic status vis a vis the seller and thus the buyer’s ability to pay (and the seller feeling entitled to a price hike). On the buy side the game hinges on the buyer’s awareness of the fair price, alternative products, services, or sellers, and the perceived value of the good or service purchased. As I discovered, at some point the game may also involve the seller saving face. Ignorance and underestimating the other can cost either player. Caveat emptor yes, but integrity should not be for sale. That spirals into certain bankruptcy.

2 comments:

Carmen Goetschius said...

This always used to make me so mad... but then I had to remind myself that it is connected to a long history of white stereotypes (unfortunately initiated by some dopey mazungu missionaries that tossed candy at children and brought China plates from England) still perpetuated today. If I was a busdriver I'd probably try to rip us off to! Way to hold your ground Bobster! By the way, you are a wonderful writer-- thanks for sharing!

Bob Louer said...

I agree Carmen, with your explanation of some of the reasons for ripping off non-locals here (especially non-locals perceived to be rich Westerners). I often wonder what I'd be doing if I'd grown up here, in poverty no less. That said, I have difficulty rationalizing unfortunate history and dire present circumstances as justification for such actions. Rip-off targets extend beyond rich Westerners to anyone who is not "in the know," and even at times, if it can be pulled off (often as overt theft -- hence the cinder block walls, often topped with shards of broken glass, steel bars on windows, etc.), to "neighbors." The desperation that stems from poverty is no doubt a contributor to these practices. My faith gives me hope that we can overcome these issues and do better than this.

Thx. for the kind words my friend. Stay "gray-sweatered" and warm in the Big Apple!