Uber looks to dominate in Brazil while taxis push to ban app
RIO DE JANEIRO — After ceding to the competition in China earlier this year, ride-hailing company Uber is shifting focus to Brazil, Latin America’s most populous nation.
Introduced in Brazil just over two years ago, use of the app has increased so quickly here that the South American giant now represents Uber’s third largest business worldwide, after the United States and India.
The rocketing growth, however, is also a race against time: local governments are moving toward regulating and taxing the company in ways that may hurt its competitive advantage while taxi unions are pushing to ban it entirely.
“There are many issues with Uber now because it’s become a big business in Brazil,” said Fabro Steibel, executive director of the Institute of Science and Technology, a Rio-based think-tank . “It’s too early to know if Uber will be a major problem or a major solution” to the country’s transportation needs.


