The real cost of doing business in Ghana – Uber, drivers and our survival economics
The real cost of doing business in Ghana – Uber, drivers and our survival economics
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The real cost of doing business in Ghana – Uber, drivers and our survival economics

Abubakar Ibrahim,Ebenezer Sarfo Adu 01pm 🕒︎ 2025-10-21

Copyright myjoyonline

The real cost of doing business in Ghana – Uber, drivers and our survival economics

Yesterday, after church, I ordered an Uber. Nice breeze, worship songs still in my head. Then, just as we were about to move, the driver gently leaned back and said in that polite Ghanaian negotiation tone:“Boss, please let’s go off trip.”I asked him, “Why?”He replied, “Uber will take around GH¢60 from this ride… just like that… for sitting in an office and doing app.”You know that moment where you pause and blink twice? That was me.So I explained that what he calls “just app” involves things like paying Google for the Maps API, maintaining servers, customer support, fraud systems — and all those things don’t run on prayer and fasting. They cost real dollars.He still wasn’t fully convinced. He hit me with a quick Ghana market analysis: “Uber has more than 4,000 cars in this country. If each driver pays around 200 cedis a day, do you know how much they are getting?!”Classic. Fast multiplication, no expenses, no tax, no overhead. Straight profit calculation with confidence.So I told him plainly — Uber is actually making losses in markets like Ghana. Their underlying cost to run the system here is not that different from America — Google API doesn’t say “Since it’s Ghana, let me charge small.” But because of our purchasing power, they can’t charge Ghanaian riders at the true operational cost. So they are basically bleeding to stay in the market… playing long-term investment games.He went quiet. The kind of silence that says, “I hear you, but chale my fuel too is not on scholarship.”At this point, I decided to call a friend who works in that mobility space to sanity-check my argument. We broke it down on the call, and I realised something crucial — both Uber and the driver are struggling, just on different balance sheets. Uber is taking a hit to build market share. The driver is hustling to survive daily. And in Ghana, these systems only work when someone like me comes in to broker a fair middle ground — which is literally my line of work.So I told the driver this: “Everybody is adjusting to survive. Uber is absorbing losses to stay here. You’re adjusting trips to make ends meet. My job in life is to find that sweet spot where both parties can breathe without fighting.”He nodded slowly — the Uber driver acceptance nod. The matter had landed.And Then… The Plot TwistThe person I was with needed to drop off on the way. The driver looked at me and said — calmly, with a small smile: “But boss… why didn’t you add it as a stop? Uber created that feature so that passengers don’t cheat the system.”Ladies and gentlemen…That’s when your “fairness consultant” also realised he intentionally didn’t add the stop — so I wouldn’t be charged extra.

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