Amit Shah launches Bharat Taxi in Gujarat, calls drivers 'Sarathis' and co-owners
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Home and Cooperation Minister Amit Shah on Saturday, 27 June launched Bharat Taxi in Gandhinagar, Gujarat, declaring the cooperative ride-hailing initiative a direct challenge to private app-based platforms — one built on a philosophy of driver ownership and dignity rather than algorithmic dependence. Addressing thousands of taxi operators at the launch event, Shah drew a sharp philosophical line between commercial platforms and the cooperative model.
The 'Sarathi' Distinction
At the heart of Shah's address was a pointed contrast in terminology. Amit Shah said that while existing app-based companies refer to those behind the wheel as mere drivers, the Bharat Taxi cooperative calls them 'Sarathis' — a Sanskrit term connoting a charioteer or trusted guide, carrying connotations of honour and agency.
'As this expansion happened, different kinds of companies came in. These companies created different kinds of apps for taxi rentals. They call the taxi operators drivers; I call them Sarathis. That itself reflects the difference in our thinking,' Shah said.
He added: 'They consider the Sarathi merely a driver, whereas we regard the driver as a Sarathi. This is the difference between the two systems.'
Drivers as Shareholders, Not Service Providers
Shah emphasised that the cooperative structure makes drivers genuine stakeholders in the organisation. He stated that seven lakh Sarathis associated with Bharat Taxi hold shareholder status in the enterprise.
'Today I proudly say that the seven lakh Sarathis associated with Bharat Taxi are the owners of Bharat Taxi; they are shareholders. When you become a shareholder, the company becomes yours. The cooperative institution becomes your own,' he said.
Shah argued that ownership would deliver drivers 'dignity, security and, in the future, prosperity' — principles he described as foundational to the Bharat Taxi model. The cooperative approach, he said, aims to move transport workers from a position of dependence on private digital platforms to active participation in the enterprise itself.
India's Evolving Mobility Landscape
Shah contextualised the launch within the rapid transformation of India's mobility sector over the past three to four decades. He noted that taxis, once a niche service, had become embedded in everyday life across virtually every household.
Illustrating this evolution, he recalled an encounter at the Kumbh Mela in Prayagraj, where he observed motorcycles operating as taxis. 'I stopped the vehicle and asked him, 'Brother, how is this a taxi?' He replied that during the Kumbh, they transport people from the railway station to the Kumbh site on motorcycles because four-wheelers are not permitted inside,' Shah recounted.
He also pointed to Gujarat's auto-rickshaw ecosystem as an example of expanding taxi scope. 'In Gujarat's transport and mobility system, the rickshaw is the lifeline of mobility. Now rickshaws too have been converted into taxis. So both the use and the scope of taxis have increased,' he said.
What Bharat Taxi Signals for Gig Workers
The launch comes amid a broader national conversation about the rights and welfare of gig economy workers, particularly those on app-based platforms who lack formal employment status, benefits, or collective bargaining power. Bharat Taxi's cooperative structure — if implemented at scale — could offer a replicable alternative model for the sector. The National Cooperation Policy framework, which Shah has championed as Cooperation Minister, provides the institutional backdrop for this initiative. Whether the model can compete with entrenched private platforms on technology, pricing, and reach remains to be seen as Bharat Taxi expands beyond Gujarat.