As Economy Picks Up, Teens Are Getting Back in the Driver's Seat 

Teens Getting Back in the Driver’s Seat As Economy Picks Up

While many observers thought that cellphones and social media had made driving less attractive to teenagers, HLDI showed there was a strong relationship between the decline in teen driving and rising teen unemployment in another study.

From aftermarketNews.com

Teenage drivers are returning to the roads, according to an analysis by the Highway Loss Data Institute (HLDI), an affiliate of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Researchers link the trend to the recent economic recovery.

Teenagers have the highest crash rate per mile traveled of any drivers, so the number of young people on the roads has important safety consequences.

Teen driving began to decline sharply about a decade ago. While many observers speculated that the proliferation of cellphones and social media had made driving less attractive to teenagers, HLDI showed there was a strong relationship between the decline in teen driving and rising teen unemployment in another study.

In a reversal, from 2012 to 2014, more teenagers found jobs. At the same time, more teenagers began driving, an update to the HLDI study shows.

“It seems like many teens really do want to drive after all, and much of the earlier decline in driving was due to the disproportionate effect of the economy on teen employment,” said HLDI Vice President Matt Moore. “When teenagers have jobs, they have more of a need to drive, along with money to help pay for it.”

For the 2013 study and the current update, HLDI analysts looked at changes in the number of rated drivers 19 and younger under collision insurance policies in 49 states and the District of Columbia. A rated driver on a policy is typically the driver in the household considered to represent the greatest loss potential for the insured vehicle (usually the teen driver, if there is one).

From 2006 to 2012, the number of rated drivers 19 and younger fell. The number of rated drivers ages 35 to 54, referred to in the study as prime-age drivers, also dropped, but not as sharply. The result was fewer teen drivers relative to prime-age drivers.

During 2013 and 2014, teen exposure went back up, while prime-age exposure continued to decline slightly.

Expressing the change as a ratio of teen drivers to prime-age drivers controls for factors that aren’t specific to teenagers. The ratio of teen drivers to prime-age drivers fell from 0.042 in 2006 to 0.038 in 2010 and then remained relatively constant through 2012. The ratio increased to 0.041 in 2014 as teens returned to the roads.

Meanwhile, the unemployment rate, defined as the percentage of the total labor force that is unemployed and actively seeking work, increased for both groups between 2006 and 2010, but the rise was steeper for teens. During 2013-2014, the unemployment rate for both groups fell, with teens experiencing a sharper decrease, the institute noted.

Thus, the unemployment spread – the difference in unemployment rates for the two groups – increased during the height of the recession, leveled off after 2010 and declined in the past few years. Looked at together, there is an inverse relationship between the unemployment spread and the ratio of teen drivers to prime-age drivers, according to HLDI.

Although population changes and changes in state licensing ages contributed somewhat to changes in the teen driver ratio, HLDI estimates that 67 percent of the ratio’s increase between 2012 and 2014 is connected with the decreasing unemployment spread.

You May Also Like

People on the Move

Recent personnel news that has appeared on bodyshopbusiness.com.

Repairify Appoints New VP of General Automotive Repair Markets

Industry veteran Ben Johnson will lead asTech Mechanical's business development and product management teams.

Read more here.

AkzoNobel Announces New Business Development Manager

Brian Martin has joined AkzoNobel's Automotive & Specialty Coatings division as business development manager for North America.

Consolidator Report

Consolidation news from the week of April 29.

Top 5 Stories of the Week

A recap of the top five stories on bodyshopbusiness.com during the week of April 29.

WIN Announces New 2024-25 Board Leadership

The Women’s Industry Network executive board executes on WIN’s vision and mission for women serving in the collision repair industry.

CIECA to Hold Webinar on Artificial Intelligence

The webinar, “The Fundamentals of Generative AI, Large Language Models and Implications for the Collision Industry,” will be held on Thursday, May 30 at 2 p.m. EST.

Other Posts

Guess the Car and Win $50!

Give us your answer for this month’s Guess the Car and you might win $50!

Lawson Products Acquires S&S Automotive

Like Lawson’s Kent Automotive business, S&S Automotive is an industry-leading distributor in the automotive dealership market.

Crash Champions Expands to Great Falls, Montana

Crash Champions has announced the successful acquisition of Mitchells’ Crash Repair, Flawless Auto Body and 3 Way Auto Body.

Car ADAS Solutions Announces New Licensee in California

Car ADAS Solutions has announced ADAS Vision as a new licensee in Imperial, Calif.