A distance of up to 30km is now pegged at 75 cents from
$1,50 while a distance of up to 40km has been reduced to $1 from $2 for
commuters using Zupco buses.Local urban routes now cost 50 cents from $1.
Acting Local Government, Public Works and National Housing
Minister Professor Amon Murwira said efficiency in Zupco’s computerised payment
system will eliminate any financial leakages making the parastatal profitable.
The Minister was responding to legislators in Parliament
during Wednesday’s National Assembly’s Question-and-Answer session.
Prof Murwira, who is
the Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology
Development, said employment of technologies will improve the running of
businesses in the country.
“Most of the prices that we charge are due to the
inefficiencies in the collection systems. So, through the Harare Institute of
Technology helping Zupco, we have developed a tap-and- go system with a card
which is a recharge card that you can put money in advance and be able to use
that and I was very happy to see Hon (Temba) Mliswa buying that card at Zupco,”
said Prof Murwira.
“With this card there is no need for the customer to carry
cash anymore. You will be having the card which has money in advance and then
you can use it every time. It therefore means 0.50 cents, according to
calculation, can make a big bus make profit. The transport in this country is
overpriced. We are proving through technology that we can have proper prices.
So, I think that is basically the issue of introducing efficiencies using
technology at Zupco. This is why we say Zupco will make profit even at 0.30
cents.”
He said fuel prices have no direct impact on bus fares. “We
are repeating the fact that the price of a bus fare has nothing to do with the
price of a litre of fuel but it has something to do with the efficiency with
which we collect money and running of the system. So through this e-system, we
are really looking forward to a situation whereby business does not
over-profiteer or under profiteer based on the efficiency of their collection
system. So, we are basically tackling the collection system and this collection
system will make it very efficient and sustainable,” Prof Murwira said.
Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi
Ziyambi said Government was performing its social responsibility duties.
“My response to this is that governments take on social
responsibility roles worldwide. If you look at the mass public transport
systems across the world, they are subsidised by the government and that other
cost is absorbed by the government to make sure that there is efficient
movement by the people. So, I am not sure which part of the policy it is where
Government is subsidising transportation to ensure that people move freely,
whether that can be taken as a bad policy,” said Cde Ziyambi. Chronicle
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