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One Curious Effect of the Recession May Bolster the Case for Driverless Cars

The Washington Post

Two researchers say they’ve discovered a curious relationship between deadly car crashes and the jobless rate — and the finding may have important implications for next-generation vehicle technologies like self-driving cars.

Fewer people die in car crashes, it turns out, when the economy is hurting.

That’s the report from Clifford Winston, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, and Vikram Maheshri, an assistant professor of economics at the University of Houston.

Writing in the Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, Winston and Maheshri claim that every 1 percent increase in unemployment is linked to a decrease in traffic fatalities by about 5,000 annual deaths.

This seems like a momentous statistic by itself. But even more important is the reason behind it: It’s because America’s least-safe drivers stay off the roads during economic downturns, according to the researchers.

How do they know that? We’ll get to the specifics of the study in a second. But the connection to driverless cars is clear: If partially or fully automated vehicles can help risky drivers drive better, we may be able to achieve the same reductions in traffic fatalities the researchers observed during the recession without, you know, actually having to go through a recession.

Winston and Maheshri’s study probably wouldn’t have been possible without some advanced technologies that are just becoming mainstream. They relied on data from State Farm, the insurance company, some of whose customers had opted in to being tracked (probably in hopes of receiving a discount on their premiums).

This individual-level data give us valuable demographic and behavioral insights that we don’t get from a national-level accounting of vehicle miles traveled, a fuzzy and imprecise metric.

Understanding which drivers are over 60 years old, own older cars that may not be as safe, have recently experienced a crash or who don’t live with a family — all risk factors — allowed the researchers to compare those groups’ driving behavior against statistically safer demographics.

And what they found was that the riskier drivers drove less, as measured by their own number of vehicle miles traveled.

Read more of the original article in The Washington Post.

Aug 28, 2016connieshedron
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