Taxi-hailing service Uber and China's e-commerce giant Alibaba Group have
agreed on a deal that will allow Chinese travellers to pay for a taxi in any
country where Uber operates.
The growth in
smartphone transport services is encouraging firms to build international
partnerships and this is evidence in this recent partnership between these two
popular companies.
Before the agreement,
mainland Chinese travelers using the Uber app overseas needed to connect a
dual-currency credit card with their Uber account and were billed for their
journeys in US dollars.
Alipay is the online
payment service of Ant Financial Services, an affiliate of Chinese e-commerce
giant Alibaba.
Alibaba is an investor
in both Didi and Lyft, on top of its partnership with Uber.
Uber said its
customers had been able to use Alipay for their journeys in mainline China
since 2014 and in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macau since early 2016.
According to BBC, the
San Francisco-based company said the cross-border payments arrangement would
cover mainland Chinese travellers in 400 cities.
Uber and Alibaba said
they intended to expand co-operation in India through Alipay's links with
Paytm, which is India's largest mobile payment provider.
Early last year, Ant
Financial teamed up with parent company Alibaba to invest more than $500m
(£341m) in Paytm.
Rival alliances
Didi, and Lyft have
also joined forces with ride-hailing apps GrabTaxi in Southeast Asia and Ola in
India.
The four companies
have formed a strategic partnership in a bid to compete with Uber.
This allows them to
share technology and local knowledge.

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