Cellular phone use while driving: costs vs. benefits
During the past few years, consumers, politicians, academics and interest groups have expressed growing concern about the safety of using cellular phones in cars and trucks. The increasing use of cellular phones in vehicles is part of a larger trend related to the introduction of technologies that could divert attention from driving.
A recently published by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) survey reports that 44 percent of American drivers have a phone with them when they drive, 7 percent have e-mail access, and 3 percent have facsimile capabilities.
Estimating that cellular phone use contributes to just under 0.74 percent of total accidents, researchers calculated the costs of U.S. drivers' cellular phone use to be $4.6 billion per year (0.0074 times $630 billion).
About half of this $4.6 billion is attributable to the 300 estimated fatalities associated with driver use of cellular phones, while the other half represents the costs associated with more minor accidents in which cellular phones were a contributing factor.
Net benefits of a ban on cellular phone use for American drivers, based on the preceding cost and benefit estimates, would impose annual net costs of about $20 billion ($25 billion in costs minus $4.6 billion in benefits). Costs of a ban are more than five times greater than the benefits.
Alternative solutions to a total ban are considered to be the use of "hands-free devices," voice activated dialing, or policies restricting who may use a phone and under what conditions. Imposing a hands-free mandate would cost users $23 per year, which implies a total cost of $1.4 billion annually.
Source: Robert W. Hahn, Paul C. Tetlock and Jason K. Burnett, Should You Be Allowed to Use Your Cellular Phone While Driving? Regulation, Volume 23, Number 3, 2000.
For more on Vehicle Regulation http://www.ncpa.org/pd/regulat/reg-2.html
Publish date: 13 June 2001
Views: 428
The views expressed in the article are the author’s and are not necessarily shared by the members of the Foundation. This article may be republished without prior consent but with acknowledgement to the author.