Download Africa`s Road Safety Challenges

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Third African Road Safety
Conference
The Economics of Road Safety
Stephen Karingi
Director, Regional Integration and Trade Division
ECA
9 July 2015
Addis Ababa
● Context
● Rationale for
estimating the
economic cost of
road crashes
● Methodologies to
estimate the costs of
road crashes: A
review of literature
● Conclusion & Way
Forward
2
Context
 Unprecedented sustained economic growth in Africa
 Spurred, partly, by spending in infrastructure, notably construction of
roads
 Spending in Africa’s infrastructure grew by 8% between 2011 and 2013
 Cape Verde, Namibia, Uganda and South Africa allocated 44% , 39%,
28%, and 24% respectively of their budgets to infrastructure in 2012
 Implications for road safety
 Improved quality and coverage of roads could increase road crashes
 Rapid economic growth is translating into increase in car ownership
which increases road conflicts
 Efforts needed to demonstrate that the benefits of investing in road
safety outweigh the cost
3
Rationale for Estimating the Cost of Road
Crashes (1)
 Advocacy for road safety is often based on a moral
perspective
 Sympathy with victims and their families
 But this has not generated sufficient political and financial
support
 Need to base advocacy on an economic case
Various studies estimate the cost of road crashes
between 1-6% of national GDP
 Mozambique 1.5 – 2.5%; Kenya 5.5%; Zambia 2.3%;
Developing Countries 1.5-2.5%
 Wide variations affect credibility of figures
 Most of these studies undertaken in the 1990s
 Need for new studies to assess current situation
4
Rationale for Estimating the Cost of Road
Crashes (2)
Active participation of politicians and Ministers of
Finance is critical for improving road safety
 Decision Makers can use figures on cost of road crashes
to improve policy making process
 Increase resources devoted to road safety and thereby
reduce road crashes
Comprehensive evaluation of road crashes include
social damages in monetary terms
 Important to include injuries and fatalities when
evaluating damages due to crashes
 Equally important when evaluating benefits of
remedies aimed at reducing road crashes
5
Who is Interested in the Cost of Road
Crashes?
Research has been conducted by experts/
practitioners/scholars in a wide range of
disciplines, including:
 Health
 Development studies
 Social and economic studies
 Traffic and Transport
 Business and insurance
 Banking and Finance
6
Where have studies been
undertaken?
 Relevant studies have been undertaken across
the world:
 Jordan, India, Sweden, US, Italy, Mexico, Spain,
Japan, Turkey, Kenya, Mozambique, South Africa,
Trinidad & Tobago, Colombia, etc.
7
Categorisations of Economic Costs
of Road Crashes
• Material
damage
• Health care
costs
• Production
losses
01/08/2017
• Cost of vehicle
damage
• Medical care
• Compensation
for injuries and
fatalities
• Material
damage
• Medical care
• Labour loss
Tangible costs
• Vehicle damage
cost
• Medical costs
• Cost incurred by
Police and
emergency
service crew
Intangible Costs
• Time individuals
involved spend
in hospital or
individual’s
incapacity costs
• Human cost
8
Methodologies Approaches to
estimate Road Accidents
The Human Capital approach
The Comprehensive approach
Years Lost Plus Direct Cost approach
Willingness-to-Pay Cost approach
Discount Rate approach
01/08/2017
9
Methodologies Approaches to
estimate Road Accidents
The Human Capital approach
The Human Capital approach measures only
market costs (property damage, medical
treatment, and lost productivity). This
typically places the value of saving a human
life at $0.5-1 million, with lesser values for
injuries.
01/08/2017
10
Methodologies Approaches to
estimate Road Accidents
The Comprehensive approach
 In addition to market costs, this approach includes
non-market costs, including pain, grief, and reduced
quality of life, as reflected by people’s willingness-toaccept increased crash risk and damages.
 11 components of the comprehensive cost are:
property damage, lost earnings, lost household
production, medical costs, emergency services, travel
delay, vocational rehabilitation, workplace costs,
administrative, legal, and pain and lost quality of life
01/08/2017
11
Methodologies Approaches to
estimate Road Accidents
Years Lost Plus Direct Cost approach
 includes the same cost components as the
comprehensive cost category; however, it replaces
lost earnings, lost household production, and pain
and lost quality of life with a non-monetary measure
01/08/2017
12
Methodologies Approaches to
estimate Road Accidents
 Willingness-to-Pay Cost approach
 refers to the costs people are willing to pay for
safety improvements to avert a fatality or injury.
Willingness-to-pay cost is another name for
comprehensive cost
 Discount Rate approach
 used to compute the present value of future
monetary costs of injury.
01/08/2017
13
Cost Components in South African
Study
 Loss of output –due to premature death, minor and major injuries
 Estimated using likely future earnings & GDP per capita
 Property damage – inside and outside vehicle
 Goods; road furniture and fixed property
 Pain, suffering and loss of amenities of life
 Hospital, medical and funeral costs
 Administrative costs
 insurance, police investigation and administrative costs
 Legal costs
 Miscellaneous costs
 Loss of time (visiting insurance companies, repair shops, etc.)
 Other cost such as telephone calls
14
Types of loss identified in Japan
 Human Loss
 Fatal
 Serious (aftereffect)
 Slight
 Material loss
 Loss to employers
 Loss to public organisations
 Ambulance service cost; Police costs; Court costs; Lawsuit
costs; Prosecutor fiscal costs; Insurance operation costs;
Social welfare costs for physically handicapped people;
Emergency care system maintenance costs; and Congestion
costs
15
Key Questions
• What is the experience in different African
countries in estimating the cost of road
crashes?
• What are the challenges to estimate the cost
of road crashes in African countries?
• Which is the most appropriate approach to
estimate the cost of road crashes in Africa?
16
Thank You
17