What can be done to help address the transportation woes of a city that due to traffic congestion? In a Q&A livestream鈥攖itled 鈥淎 Better Normal鈥 and organized by podcast platform PumaPodcast and Asia Society鈥攗rban planner Benjie de la Pe帽a proposes a new way jeeps and buses can ply Metro Manila鈥檚 roads more efficiently: have the government rent them.
He鈥檚 referring to service contracting, an 鈥渁greement whereby a contractor supplies time, effort, and/or expertise instead of a good鈥. In this case, the contractor is the transport operator, offering a transport service defined by an agreed number of kilometers and trips per day. The government, their client, will pay the operators a fixed amount and collect the fares from passengers themselves, possibly through an automated system.
Currently, many jeepneys operate on a boundary system, where the driver鈥檚 profit is whatever鈥檚 left after gas expense and vehicle 鈥渞ent鈥 to the operator. This puts pressure on the driver to take on as many passengers as possible per trip, in as many trips as they can make for the day. This incentivizes poor road behavior, like stopping to load passengers at non-designated areas, adding to our traffic problems.
Compounding this issue is the general community quarantine (GCQ), these jeepneys are , among drivers as they struggle to feed their families. This also makes commuting more challenging for the public, with some lining up at rail stations to ensure that they get to work on time.
By employing service contracting, drivers are assured a fixed salary. And since the number of passengers per trip is no longer a concern, this makes the current general community quarantine (GCQ) period a good transitional phase for service contracting until it becomes, potentially, a permanent arrangement.
鈥淸The driver鈥檚] job is to pick up the passengers but most importantly, [their] second job is to fulfill performance requirements: is it clean, is it safe. And in the time of COVID, [they] can say, 鈥業 can only take on half the amount of passengers,鈥欌 said de la Pe帽a.
While several groups welcomed the proposal, some suggested that it wouldn’t come without its own bumps in the road. Atty. Zona Tamayo of the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) mentioned the apprehension of some drivers to transition to a new system. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 blame them naman po鈥 because they鈥檝e been doing this for, let鈥檚 say, the past 30 years. Some even inherited the operation or driving of the jeep,鈥 she said.
ASec. Tony Lambino of the Department of Finance cited a huge number of competing requests for the government鈥檚 stimulus package, a barrier considering the proposal鈥檚 P32 billion price tag for a three-month run. 鈥淥ur deficit is already higher than 8% of GDP, and the bills that we鈥檝e seen in terms of economic stimulus plan, let鈥檚 just say that they blow up the deficit,鈥 he said.
But for de la Pe帽a, it could be a measure well worth the price.
鈥淐ompetitiveness is not just about our tax levels, because we can have the lowest taxes in the world, but if our workers are exhausted and there鈥檚 a high cost to business not because of the taxes but because of the transportation in doing business, then we鈥檙e not competitive,鈥 he said.


