dcbwhaley wrote:
Quote:
estimated 400,000 uninsured drivers
Then that. per Abercrombie, is 400,000 very safe drivers.

To be serious: are there any statistics which demonstrate that uninsured drivers are either more or less likely to be involved in accidents.?
Various sources puts the national figure at circa 1 to 1.5 million (5% of all vehicles), so it seems the capital must be somewhat over-represented when it comes to uninsured driving. Could this be anything to do with evading the hugely punitive CC charge?
There is nothing in RCGB2007.
I did pick up this within the recent DfT consultation document:
Quote:
We estimate that uninsured and untraced drivers kill 160 people and injure 23,000 every year.
160 out of ~ 2800 would be 5.7%.
Of course the 5.7% figure includes those untraced, so the uninsured portion would be lower than that, but I doubt it would be much lower because those uninsured are far more likely to hit and run; so uninsured drivers may seem to be about evenly represented in the crash stats.
Then there is the factor that uninsured drivers would cover a lot less mileage than the typical insured driver (commuters, works drivers) for fear of being caught by ANPR and getting stung at any time (by real traf pol) even without committing a 'driving' offence. So in terms of exposure, I think it is safe to claim that uninsured drivers must be significantly over-represented in the stats.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/3587125.stm