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Highway Safety: Have Automobile Weight Reductions Increased Highway Fatalities?

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Report Type Reports and Testimonies
Report Date Oct. 8, 1991
Report No. PEMD-92-1
Subject
Summary:

Smaller cars, the argument goes, are less safe than larger cars, and the automobile fatality rate will therefore increase if more small cars appear on America's roadways. This projection about the negative consequences of future auto downsizing derives from research on the effects of past auto weight reductions among specific makes and models of cars or in particular types of accidents. This research has focused on "crashworthiness"--that is, the protection that cars of different sizes afford their occupants in a collision. GAO reviewed the literature on auto weight and safety and did its own analysis from fatal traffic accident data compiled by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. GAO's findings support the view that the auto weight reductions since the mid-1970s have had virtually no effect on total highway fatalities. Fatality rates for all cars have declined in recent years, but the rate for light cars has improved more than for heavier cars. GAO found that an approach that focuses exclusively on crashworthiness neglects other important factors involved in the weight/safety relationship that may have had beneficial effects on highway safety during the 1970s and 1980s. One of these factors is the dramatic reduction in the number of heavy cars and therefore in the danger that these cars pose to occupants of other vehicles with which they collide.

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