Is it true that TAXI drivers can earn $6K a month!!!
Cabbies get $6K pay?
by Ansley Ng

Just a few months ago, taxi drivers were bemoaning a dip in takings after a fare hike last November appeared to have put passengers off.
Flag-down fares rose 20 cents, and peak periods were extended, meaning passengers pay a higher surcharge.
Some commuters figured it was just no longer cost-savvy to take taxis, while a small number had boycotted taking cabs as a protest.
But new salary figures reported by The Straits Times on Monday showed that the incomes of taxi drivers have gone up – some as much as 30 per cent.
ComfortDelGro, Singapore’s biggest taxi operator, said that since the fare hike in November, the average net daily income per cab has risen 12 per cent to $210.93.
This works out to $5,906 per month, if a driver works 28 days.
The rise excludes vehicle rental and diesel.
Trans-Cab, the second largest operator here, said its drivers have seen a 20 to 30 per cent increase in takings, the newspaper said.
The firm’s general manager Jasmine Tan told the paper that drivers who take on a solo shift without a relief driver can take home about $3,200 per month.
Those with a relief driver can earn between $2,500 and $2,800 per month, the report added.
Cabbies get $6K pay?
by Ansley Ng

Just a few months ago, taxi drivers were bemoaning a dip in takings after a fare hike last November appeared to have put passengers off.
Flag-down fares rose 20 cents, and peak periods were extended, meaning passengers pay a higher surcharge.
Some commuters figured it was just no longer cost-savvy to take taxis, while a small number had boycotted taking cabs as a protest.
But new salary figures reported by The Straits Times on Monday showed that the incomes of taxi drivers have gone up – some as much as 30 per cent.
ComfortDelGro, Singapore’s biggest taxi operator, said that since the fare hike in November, the average net daily income per cab has risen 12 per cent to $210.93.
This works out to $5,906 per month, if a driver works 28 days.
The rise excludes vehicle rental and diesel.
Trans-Cab, the second largest operator here, said its drivers have seen a 20 to 30 per cent increase in takings, the newspaper said.
The firm’s general manager Jasmine Tan told the paper that drivers who take on a solo shift without a relief driver can take home about $3,200 per month.
Those with a relief driver can earn between $2,500 and $2,800 per month, the report added.