http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0, ... 54,00.html
Death rate doubles for young drivers
By Ben Webster, Transport Correspondent
THE death rate among young drivers has doubled in the past five years, prompting demands for greater restrictions on those who have recently passed their tests.
The steady improvement in road safety across the general population is masking a sharp increase in the number of drivers aged under 20 having fatal crashes, despite a tougher driving test.
A third more young drivers were killed in 2004 than in 2000 despite a halving in the proportion of young people with driving licences. The number of deaths per 100,000 young licence holders has increased from 9.7 in 2000 to 19.2 in 2004.
Many of the crashes involve groups of young people travelling together late at night, often with the driver under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
A study by the AA Motoring Trust found that the growing tendency among young people to defer taking their driving test, far from reducing the danger, could be increasing it. With fewer of the young having licences, they tend to drive in larger groups. Inexperienced drivers are less likely to realise that a heavily laden car is harder to control on bends and has longer braking distances.
The AA research also suggests that there is a greater tendency among young drivers to show off behind the wheel to the growing proportion of their peers who have not passed their tests. The smaller pool of younger drivers means there are fewer available to take turns as the designated driver and avoid alcohol.
Andrew Howard, the AA’s head of road safety, said: “If you are the only person in your group of friends with a licence and always have to do the driving, it may be more tempting to have a drink.”
Many young people are being deterred from taking their driving test because of the rising cost of insurance and new elements in the test that have made it more awkward to pass. An 18-year-old pays an average of £1,700 for car insurance, according to A&A Group, a leading broker.
The Department for Transport introduced a theory test in 1996, a hazard perception test in 2003 and now even requires candidates to have a basic understanding of car maintenance.
The higher proportion of young people going to university means more are putting off learning to drive until after they graduate. Financial constraints are also a factor, with the average novice driver spending £1,162 on lessons and test fees, according to a study published today by Churchill Insurance.
The AA proposes that new drivers should be obliged to sign a code under which they would agree not to drive between midnight and 5am and to limit the number of passengers they carried until they had gained two years’ experience.
Mr Howard said that breaches of the code would be taken into account if drivers committed a motoring offence, with courts issuing harsher penalties.
“A code would be more effective than new laws, as it would be difficult for police to enforce laws restricting young drivers.
Cameras can’t detect how old someone is or how long they have been driving.”
New drivers already face having their licences revoked if they accumulate six penalty points within two years of qualifying.
However, they can simply retake their tests and get back behind the wheel.