SoftBank’s Son says Japan is ‘stupid’ for not allowing ride-sharing

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SoftBank Corp CEO Ken Miyauchi speaks during a news conference about their Japanese taxi-hailing joint venture in Tokyo, Japan. — Reuters photo

TOKYO: SoftBank Group Corp chief executive Masayoshi Son slammed the Japanese government’s ride-sharing ban and said the country had fallen behind overseas rivals in areas such as artificial intelligence and fintech.

“Ride-sharing is prohibited by law in Japan. I can’t believe there is still such a stupid country,” said Son at an annual company event aimed at customers and suppliers.

The comments reflect Son’s frustration with Japan where he built the cash engine that has powered his investments – the domestic telecoms business – but has overlooked for its growing range of technology investments in favour of overseas startups.

The Japanese government outlaws non-professional drivers from transporting paying customers on safety grounds and the country has a vocal taxi industry lobby that has opposed deregulation.

When asked for a response, a spokesman for the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, and Transport said that an issue with ride-sharing services was that while the driver was in charge of transporting passengers, it was unclear who was in charge of maintenance and operation.

“The ministry believes that offering these services for a fee poses problems from the points of both safety and user protection, and careful consideration is necessary,” he said.

SoftBank and its nearly US$100 billion Vision Fund have invested in ride-sharing firms Uber Technologies Inc, China’s Didi Chuxing, India’s Ola and Southeast Asia’s Grab.

SoftBank and Didi are launching a taxi-hailing service in Japan that would match users to existing taxi fleets. — Reuters