When headline inflation hits 11.7%, transport stops being just a matter of logistics and becomes a true test of a city’s economic survival. Rising commute costs stop students from reaching classrooms, lower office productivity, and keep people from finding work. Tough economic times demand a major shift in how digital apps operate, moving away from rigid corporate formulas towards transparent, negotiated marketplaces.
From the supply chain breaks of the pandemic in 2020 to the commodity shocks of the Russia-Ukraine war and recent tensions in the Middle East, Pakistan feels these global tensions immediately. Fuel prices have become the primary driver of inflation across the country.
Keeping our cities moving during tough economic times is not as simple as letting an app automatically raise fares whenever fuel prices go up. Traditional fixed-pricing models assume a level of economic predictability that markets like Pakistan simply do not have.
In a sensitive economy, keeping transport affordable for the public while ensuring drivers can make a living requires a completely different approach. This is why the tech industry needs to shift toward flexible, peer-to-peer pricing systems. Pioneered by platforms like inDrive, this model moves away from rigid corporate algorithms that blindly set prices.
Instead, it allows the commuter and the driver to mutually agree on a fare before the journey even starts. This changes the entire experience, turning an automated corporate price into a fair, human agreement.
The reason why this approach works is that inDrive charges drivers the lowest commission rates in the country. This simple shift ensures that drivers keep a much larger share of their hard-earned money, while passengers retain the flexibility to find a price that fits their budget.
This flexibility is very important in Pakistan, where every city and neighborhood has its own economic reality. The actual cost of a trip changes based on real-time traffic jams, broken roads, bad weather, and local safety concerns. These are details that hidden corporate algorithms consistently fail to understand.
By removing the algorithmic middleman and keeping platform commissions low, a flexible marketplace helps everyone. For passengers, it protects their budget and gives them a choice in a tough economy. For drivers, whether they operate bikes, cars, or rickshaws, it gives them the power to decide if a trip makes sense against their actual fuel and operating costs before they hit the road.
We cannot build resilient cities on rigid, unyielding digital systems. We need flexible, transparent platforms that reflect the real world.
As Pakistan continues to navigate inflation, the apps that truly serve the nation will not be the ones that try to control the market with invisible formulas, but the ones that empower human choice and keep transport accessible for everyone.