I spent five years as a night cabbie in Canberra. Loved the job, to tell the truth. My aim was to have the passenger smiling at the end of the trip.
But the economics wore me down. The money got worse and worse as the government put more and more licences on. Sure, it solved the problem of long queues at the airport, but that just meant that for the rest of the time all these new cabbies were hunting for work and they didn't mind ignoring the rules to get it.
So I got out. Along with a lot of long-time cabbies who knew the town, looked after the passengers, did a good job. I think it's the same everywhere now. Cabdriving is something that can be done without a lot of skill or experience, the one taxi licence can be shared around several people, you learn on the job, you have passengers pretty much at your mercy, especially if their luggage is in the boot, the good old GPS will always do the work for you if you haven't a clue.
The money needs to be made to pay the insanely high costs of keeping a cab on the road. Government fees, network fees, Cabcharge fees, insurance and all the rest of it. The cars and drivers work long shifts because if the car is idle it's not making money. It's government skimping on good public transport, that's the problem. Tie the airport into the regular public transport system, charge the regular public transport fares, the problem sorts itself out.
Hmmm. Best cabs. London black cabs, I think. I've used them a few times, they navigated the complex streets with aplomb, the vehicles are well-designed. Expensive, but worth it.
Worst. Cabbies in Charleston. Stoned, driving dirty jalopies full of litter.