Car Insurance: Young People [Relevant documents: Oral and written
evidence taken before the Petitions and Transport Committees on the
cost of car insurance for young people, HC 940.] 4.30 pm
Steve Double (St Austell and Newquay) (Con) I beg to move,
That this House has considered e-petition 166847 relating to
the cost of car insurance for young people....Request free trial
Car Insurance: Young People
[Relevant documents: Oral and written evidence taken before the
Petitions and Transport Committees on the cost of car insurance
for young people, HC 940.]
4.30 pm
-
(St Austell and Newquay)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered e-petition 166847 relating
to the cost of car insurance for young people.
As always, it is a pleasure to serve under your
chairmanship, Sir Roger. I start by thanking Rhys Parker,
the young man who started this petition, and the many
thousands of people who have since signed it. It concerns
the high cost of car insurance premiums for young drivers.
The cost of car insurance for young people has in recent
years risen to very high levels—so much so, that it can
have the effect of leaving those unable to afford initial
insurance premiums hampered or even excluded from owning
and driving a car. That in turn excludes them from many
aspects of life, including work and education
opportunities. For instance, one in five jobs advertised
requires a driving licence and 63% of people need a car to
get to work.
I have had the honour of seeing my two sons learn to drive.
Both passed within a few months of becoming 17, as did I,
although that was some time ago. In fact, I realised today
that it is almost 33 years to the very week since I passed
my driving test. I understand that obtaining a driving
licence is very much a rite of passage for many young
people today, and I suspect it always will be. It is a
further key step along the way for young people’s growing
independence. It is part of growing up and making their way
in the world. That is particularly true in rural areas,
such as my constituency of St Austell and Newquay. I fear
that high premiums can be a contributory factor to the
drain of the young from our rural areas, where a licence to
drive and access to a car are vital to getting around, due
to the lack of public transport.
The challenge with the huge cost of insurance for young
drivers is complex, and there are no quick and easy
solutions. All the many considerations should be carefully
reviewed, not only to reduce premiums, but to reduce the
toll of death and injury among too many of our novice
drivers. The focus of this debate should not just be on the
high premiums charged, nor should it be an attempt to
introduce a capped pricing system; rather, we should focus
on dealing with the reasons why policies cost so much.
-
(Henley) (Con)
My hon. Friend is making some excellent points. I got
around being a young driver by not getting my driving
licence until I was much older—I managed to beat him on
that. I wonder whether his approach of dealing with the
causes of this issue will overcome that difficulty and
tension between the risks and the accidents that occur in
this age group and the premiums that are naturally charged.
-
I am grateful to my hon. Friend for that intervention. He
makes the precise point that I will be making, which is
that the cost of insurance is based on risk. The reason the
cost of insurance for young people is so high is because
the risk is so much higher. Rather than imposing an
artificial cap, we instead need to look at why that risk is
so high and work to reduce it, as premiums will then
naturally come down.
I am afraid I cannot support capping premiums, which would
defy the logic of risk that the insurer is taking. Insurers
assess those risks from many sources and charge a premium
accordingly. It is a competitive industry, and any attempt
to cap the price that insurers charge would surely simply
result in other groups having to pay more than they should.
It would also fail to deal with the cause, which is that
novice drivers have a far worse accident record than any
other group. One in five young drivers has an accident
within the first six months after passing their test.
Indeed, I was one of them. They are 10 times more likely to
make a claim. That speaks of a systemic failure of our
current tuition and test procedures, which I have come to
understand is at the heart of this issue. Put simply, the
current system teaches young people how to pass a test,
rather than how to be a safe and competent driver. If we
want to deal with the fruit of high premiums, we must deal
with the root cause. Capping premiums will not stop the
accidents.
-
(Rossendale and Darwen)
(Con)
This is a very important debate, especially for my
constituents, who live in a similarly rural area to that of
my hon. Friend. Does he acknowledge that black box
technology in young people’s cars is a much better way of
altering driver behaviour in the long term than the current
driving test?
-
Later in my speech, I will talk about telematics and some
of the available technology. My response to my hon. Friend
is that I think we need both. Yes, we need to embrace
technology and use it as much as possible to help people to
be safe on the roads, but I am also of the view that we can
do better with the current testing regime in helping people
at that very initial stage to be safer on the roads.
-
(Bury St Edmunds)
(Con)
Does my hon. Friend agree that the 21st-century driving
conditions that my four children, his children and all the
young people in our rural constituencies face on the roads
mean that we need a different approach? Lessons on
night-time driving and motorway driving are not obligatory.
Many countries, including New Zealand, Australia and
France, run a probationary period, for example, which is
something that could be looked at and learned from.
-
My hon. Friend makes a very good point that I will come to
later. I think the current testing regime needs to be more
robust and more comprehensive to address the many different
aspects of driving, rather than just having the very narrow
test we have currently. We teach young people to pass the
test. We do not equip them to deal them with the many
different experiences of driving on roads in the UK today.
-
Karl M?Cartney (Lincoln) (Con)
Before my hon. Friend moves on, I am intrigued and
interested to hear about the various different safety
regimes for new drivers, but what we are discussing in
today’s debate is the cost of premiums for young drivers.
Does he not agree that one of the reasons why they are so
expensive is that insurance companies keep putting them up?
The rates are not as open and competitive as some of us
would like them to be. The companies obviously want to
carry on making profits and perhaps pass on the costs of
expensive whiplash claims to premium holders, whether they
are young or old.
-
My hon. Friend makes a very good point. I am certainly not
here to defend every insurance company or the premiums they
quote to young people or anyone else. I am sure there is
always room to do better and drive down those costs. We
could talk about the insurance premium tax, which has
perhaps contributed to the cost. Young people are unfairly
penalised on that count because of the high premiums. We
need to be realistic: this is about insurance companies
assessing risk and charging according to that.
To put the matter into perspective, a typical insurance
premium for a teenager is £2,000, which comes out at just
over £5 a day. I am sure that many Members in the Chamber
today have very nice vehicles. Would they give their car to
a 17-year-old for 24 hours to drive however they chose in
return for £5? I do not think many of us would do that. As
much £2,000 is a very large amount of money for someone who
is 17 or 18 years old—we acknowledge that—we also
understand that for that money they are getting insurance
cover not only for the vehicle, but for any third-party
damage or injury that they may cause.
-
(Blackley and
Broughton) (Lab)
I am following the logic of the hon. Gentleman’s argument,
which is that insurance costs are related not only to the
experience of the driver, but to their age. We have been
moving the age of responsibility up in lots of areas, such
as for buying cigarettes, so would he agree with increasing
the age at which someone can get a full licence from 17 to
18?
-
I personally am not of that view. If fact, if we look
across the world, other countries allow young people to
learn to drive at much younger ages. I certainly would not
look to reduce the age. However, I think we need to give
our young 17 and 18-year-olds more tuition and better
experience, so that they become more capable drivers much
quicker. That is where I would focus the attention, rather
than increasing the age. If we increase the age, they will
still be new drivers at whatever age they begin to drive.
-
Karl M?Cartney
I thank my hon. Friend for giving way; he is doing well
with so many interventions. I want to reassure all the
young drivers or potential young drivers who might be
following this debate that although hon. Members would
perhaps not lend them their nice, or not-so-nice, cars for
£5 a day, having seen some of my hon. Friends driving, I
probably would not lend them my car for £5 a day either.
-
I am grateful for that point.
Some young would-be drivers, overwhelmed at the potentially
unobtainable cost of car ownership, including, but
especially, insurance, are tempted to simply flout the law
and proceed to drive without insurance and at times even
without a licence, which is a totally unacceptable and
dangerous solution. That has disastrous consequences for
them and for other road users. The fallout can be death,
serious injury or a criminal record, and, with motoring
prosecutions now a part of their profile, it makes it even
more expensive to start the process towards a driving
insurance premium. It also has the effect of pushing up
insurance costs for law-abiding, properly insured drivers.
There is genuine concern about the cost of insurance for
young drivers from many quarters, not just from novice
drivers. There is concern about the impact on other
outcomes and about excluding the young from a societal
norm: the freedom to own and run a car. The high costs of
entry might also feed into other problems in society:
isolation, alienation and perhaps even a sense of failure
for young people. We therefore need to take the matter
seriously.
However, it is important to consider why the premiums are
so high. The Government’s response to the petition stated:
“The Government is aware that the cost of motor insurance
can be high for new drivers and understands the concerns
that have been expressed about this. The average cost of
motor insurance for the 17-22 age group was estimated to be
£1277 as at January 2016”.
In my experience and from talking to many people, the cost
is often much higher than that. It is important to bear in
mind that motor insurers have to provide unlimited cover
against the risk of personal injury to third parties and
cover of up to £1 million for property damage. They use a
wide range of criteria to assess the potential risk that a
driver poses, which include the age of the applicant, the
type of vehicle being driven, the area where the applicant
lives and his or her driving experience.
-
(South Antrim)
(UUP)
Is the hon. Gentleman aware that in Northern Ireland our
premiums are 11% higher and that we do not have the same
caps on injury claims? We need those to be introduced; we
do not need Northern Ireland to be left behind so that we
are outside the system.
We also have the restricted plate: instead of an L-plate,
an R-plate is put on so that the driver cannot go more than
45 mph. Despite putting all those things in place, we still
have the higher premiums, and we may be about to leave
Northern Ireland out.
-
I am grateful for that intervention. I was not aware of the
points made by the hon. Gentleman. I certainly bow to his
knowledge in this area. He has made his points well.
Although the Government cannot intervene directly in the
setting of premiums, they can help to establish a situation
in which young and newly qualified drivers are better
equipped for a life of independent driving. Accordingly,
the Government have taken forward a programme of measures
to strengthen the way in which people learn to drive and
are tested, and to provide opportunities for additional
training for newly qualified drivers.
We have also engaged insurers in the process so that they
can have confidence that additional measures will make a
real difference that can be rewarded. We are focusing our
efforts on encouraging learner drivers to do more practice
and to practise in a wider range of driving conditions; on
ensuring that the driving test assesses the skills needed
for today’s roads and vehicles and those of the future; and
on identifying the most promising behavioural, educational
and technological interventions that can reduce young
driver casualties.
The Government’s road safety statement, published in
December 2015, announced a £2 million research programme to
identify the best possible interventions for learner and
novice drivers. The road safety statement also conveyed the
Government’s wider commitment to addressing concerns about
motor insurance premiums for all drivers. It states:
“We will support innovation in the motoring insurance
market so premiums become more responsive to safer driver
behaviour and vehicle choice. This could include extending
the ‘reward based’ insurance approach pioneered through
young driver telematics products to the wider motoring
community and fleets.”
In essence, insurance premiums reflect the risk of the
potential claim both in terms of the number of claims and
the cost of each claim. Claims from young drivers are
typically four times higher than the average. The
statistics are startling and throw into perspective why
insurance costs are so high.
Research for the RAC Foundation showed that although
teenage drivers make up only 1.5% of full licence holders,
they are involved in 12% of accidents where someone is
killed or seriously hurt. One in five newly qualified
drivers will have an accident within six months of passing
their test.
The European Commission notes that in developed countries
traffic accidents are the main cause of death among 15 to
24-year-olds; the fatality rate for drivers in that age
group is twice as high as that of more experienced drivers.
Further, for every young driver killed in a crash, an
average of 1.3 other people also die as passengers or other
road users. Young drivers with passengers have greatly
increased chances of being involved in serious and fatal
accidents owing to factors such as peer pressure and
over-confidence. Accidents involving young drivers are
often caused by loss of control or speeding and are more
likely to happen at night.
We must not lose sight of the fact that behind the high
insurance premiums are these heartbreaking statistics—lives
lost, life-limiting injuries and heartbroken families and
friends. The issue is not only or even primarily about
money; the real cost of young drivers is the lives lost and
the families in mourning. Premiums can be prohibitively
expensive, but of even greater concern to us should be the
cause: novice drivers are much more likely to be involved
in fatal accidents.
More must be done to address the reasons behind the high
premiums and close the high accident rate between
inexperienced drivers and the rest of the driving
community. There are many avenues to explore in improving
the accident toll and also valid ways of reducing premiums,
including improved training and tuition, extending
advertising and education around the perils and risks for
young drivers, legislation to further penalise poor
driving, and compulsory professional tuition.
Manufacturers’ innovations and new technologies will also
play an increasing role.
There are various ways in which novice drivers can reduce
insurance premiums. For instance, Pass Plus is a practical
training course that takes at least six hours and helps
drivers to improve their skills and drive more safely. It
can be taken at any time, although it should be most useful
to new drivers in the year after passing their test.
However, a more thorough overhaul is due, which I will come
to later.
Another option to ease premiums is the addition of a
named—usually older—driver with a clean licence and good
accident-free record, who may make occasional use of the
car and can reduce the overall premium. That is very
different from the illegal practice known as “fronting”,
where a low-risk driver fronts as the main user of the car
when in fact it is predominantly used by the inexperienced
driver.
-
(Belfast East)
(DUP)
I am very grateful to the hon. Gentleman for giving way on
that point. The consideration about whether what is
involved is fronting or a useful tool to lower premiums
often takes place after a collision. That is when the
insurance company—in my view, unfairly and narrowly—looks
at the circumstances. If it comes to the view that the
person is fronting or has been fraudulent it cancels the
policy and treats it as if it never existed. Insurance
companies do not want it to be used as a mechanism to
reduce premiums; they are trying to catch people out.
-
The hon. Gentleman makes a very good point. There are many
pitfalls to the issue of fronting. The insurance industry
should do more to address that issue at the beginning,
rather than wait until there is a claim. Companies happily
take the premiums before they address the problem. There is
more that can be done to ensure that, when older drivers
are put on policies, it is proper and legitimate.
Some insurers now offer telematics policies and fit a
GPS-enabled transmitter to the car; I believe that
smartphone app options are also available. Drivers under 21
who take out such a policy and have the appropriate
equipment fitted are typically offered a 25% discount on
the initial premiums. Such policies can also further reduce
renewal premiums, as there is a record of where, when and
how the car has been driven. High-risk driving behaviours
are recorded by the technology and can cause renewal
premiums to rise, whereas sensible driving can lead to a
significant reduction in premiums.
One insurer, Marmalade, which operates a telematic policy,
saw a dramatic improvement in the accident rates of novice
drivers. On average, one in five new drivers makes a claim
in the first six months, but with monitoring equipment in
place, that number improved to one in 16—an outstanding and
significant improvement. Telematics policies have been
growing in number. In 2009, there were about 12,000, but
the technology has become more widely known and continues
to fall in price, making the policies more attractive: the
number has risen quickly to more than 750,000 today.
Dash-cam technology can also be used to improve driving and
can lead to a fall in the insurance price. Some insurers
now offer lower costs—typically 10% lower —provided that a
camera is fitted and is always activated when driving. That
footage is made available should there be a claim. That
irrefutable evidence can be very helpful, given that young
drivers are sometimes blamed and bullied at the roadside
for collisions that are not actually their fault, and there
is often a presumption that the less experienced driver is
at fault. Dash cams also have the effect of improving
driving behaviour, as the driver knows there is a record of
how the car has been driven.
Some households enter into a written agreement with the
novice driver, in which behaviours such as careful, legal
and considerate use of the car are set out. Both parties
sign the agreement, which, although not legally binding,
offers a clearly set out explanation and brings focus,
consideration and thought to the very real responsibilities
of driving safely. An example template can be found on the
website brake.org.
As helpful and welcome as many of those things are, they
fail to address the underlying issue. It is time for us to
look at our system for obtaining a licence to drive. It is
my view that in this country we teach people to pass the
test, rather than educate and train them to become safe and
competent drivers. Rhys Parker, the instigator of this
petition, said to members of the Petitions Committee:
“if young people are so dangerous that the only way to get
them to drive safely is forcing them to pay £200 for an
advanced driving test, why don’t we just make the driving
test better?”
I agree. I think he has a point.
The driving licence was first introduced in 1903, but there
was no test requirement. The test was introduced in 1935,
and although there have been some changes along the way,
such as the introduction of the theory test in the
mid-’90s, little has changed. In that time, vehicle
technology has changed, cars have become much faster and we
have gone from fewer than 1 million cars on our roads to
more than 30 million.
The driving scene in our country has changed completely. I
believe we need a better, more rigorous and comprehensive
system of training and testing that is fit for our age and
our roads. I suggest that passing the driving test should
be seen not as a one-off, but as a process. Under what has
become known as a graduated driving test, new drivers would
have restrictions placed on their driving. For example,
they would not be able to drive at night or on motorways,
or carry more than one passenger, until they received
further tuition, gained more experience and further proved
their ability to drive.
-
I thank my hon. Friend for the powerful points he is
making. Will he consider the fact that some young people in
our isolated rural areas need that access? Headway, a brain
injury charity, spoke to me about the problem it has with
carers. For a young person paid the minimum wage, a huge
premium is a tough barrier that can prevent them from
following a career they wish to pursue.
-
My hon. Friend makes a good point; she represents a rural
area similar to mine. As I said at the beginning, that can
be a real issue. For a young person in a rural area who
needs a car to get to work, get a job or access further
education, the cost of insurance can be a real issue. My
two young sons passed their test quite young, and we had to
work with them to find the money for the insurance. It is a
real issue, and we need to tackle it at source by looking
at the risk, rather than artificially managing it.
-
Two issues arise from what I said earlier about the
R-plate, which limits people to 45 mph for the first six
months: first, the issue of not driving on motorways faster
than 45 mph, which causes problems; and secondly, the fact
that no one is taught how to drive at night. As the hon.
Gentleman said, people need special training so they learn
those things before they pass their test.
-
I am grateful for that point.
-
I return to the main issue of the debate. Despite all that
has been said about changing their behaviour, could young
people not legitimately say that when they pay their very
large insurance premiums when they first start to drive,
they are paying into the Motor Insurers’ Bureau for
uninsured drivers? Young people have said to me, “Why
should I pay for people who behave badly? Why shouldn’t
people who behave well have put money aside to try to
reduce premiums in rural areas?” Why are young people
compelled to pay for the mistakes of people who insist on
breaking our laws?
-
My hon. Friend makes a powerful point. Our young people are
penalised for the fact that lots of people behave
irresponsibly and even illegally.
I am not saying that nothing can be done to address the
issue of premiums. As I said earlier, there are ways in
which the industry can drive down those costs and be more
competitive, but I am still of the view that the only way
we are going to address this issue in the long term is to
deal with the cause: the fact that far too many young
people who go out to drive having just passed their tests
have accidents. Sadly, too many of them die or get lifelong
injuries. What drives me to wanting to improve the
situation is the need to make our roads safer for our young
drivers. That will result in driving down premiums, but I
am as focused on saving lives as on saving money.
As we look to the future, we must balance any action with
an acknowledgment that, overall, we drive on some of the
safest roads in the world. Technology will rapidly come to
our aid and help us to be safer on the road, but in the
meantime we must close the gap on the high accident rates
of novice drivers—not just so we can reduce premiums, but
so we can save lives.
4.59 pm
-
Mrs (Liverpool, Riverside)
(Lab/Co-op)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Roger. I thank the hon. Member for St Austell and Newquay
(Steve Double) for his comments, and I agree with the basic
points that he made. I will focus on some of the issues he
mentioned and perhaps refer to one or two other issues that
are relevant.
The first point, and one that we should all accept, is that
this petition is extremely important. It not only draws
attention to an issue that is of great concern to many
young people and their parents, but suggests a remedy,
which is important. Even if the remedy is problematic, the
petition suggests what to do about the problem, rather than
just enunciating it. Figures have been presented to us. The
cost of premiums for young people is currently between
£1,450 and £7,000. There is clearly a massive problem
there. That has resulted in a number of things. Some young
people who need to drive are not driving. They are people
who need to get to college, to work and to get on with
their lives. That problem affects not solely those living
in a rural area; it can affect people living in other sorts
of areas as well.
The problem can also lead to people fronting, an illegal
practice in which an older person, perhaps a parent,
applies for the insurance and acquires it, but in reality
it is for the young person. It can also result in young
people driving uninsured, which is dangerous and illegal
and should not happen. When we look at the extent of the
problem, we need to think about all those aspects of it.
The problem is serious and perhaps it is escalating,
particularly as we have been told that the cost of motor
insurance may increase. It is not a new problem. In 2009
the then Select Committee on Transport conducted a report
on novice drivers. This was identified as one of the issues
then. At that time, the Committee suggested a number of
ways in which to address it, including a different way of
looking at the driving test, better training, more
publicity campaigns and graduated licensing. In the time
that has elapsed since then, the same sorts of suggestions
have been made, but not very much has been done to change
the situation, except perhaps for the development of
telematics, which could be a game-changer. I will come back
to that.
Successive Transport Select Committees have looked at the
issue. I have already mentioned the 2009 report on novice
drivers, but more recently the Transport Committee has
looked at other aspects of the issue. It looked at the cost
of motor insurance in 2011 and included in that
investigation the high cost of such insurance for young
people. In 2014, we looked at safety issues. In 2016, we
looked at road traffic law enforcement, which related to
many of the safety issues that are highly relevant to the
risk attached to driving by young people. Therefore, the
issue is not new. We have to ask why, as the issue was
identified so long ago and is so well documented, so little
has been done to address it. I hope that the petition will
help to change that situation and lead to further action.
As has been pointed out, insurers when justifying the very
high premiums for young people point to the higher risk
that they pose. When we look at the statistics for
casualties on the roads, we perhaps see some of what the
insurers mean. We keep being told that we have a good road
safety record. That is true in the sense that fewer people
are being killed and seriously injured on our roads, but
the stark figures make us register that there is still much
too much unnecessary loss of life and too many often
life-changing serious injuries are inflicted on people. In
2015, the last year for which we have figures, 1,730 people
were killed on our roads and 22,144 were seriously injured.
Those are very serious figures, even if they were higher in
previous years, as they were.
When we look at what is happening in relation to young
people, however, the figures are startling. We have already
heard some. There are different ways of putting them. One
way causes lots of shock waves. It is when we say that
nearly half of 18 to 24-year-olds crash within six months
of passing their driving test; and 18 to 25-year-olds, who
represent 7% of licence holders, are involved in 25% of
road deaths. Those figures are shocking and something has
to be done.
The insurers say, “High risk, so high premiums.” We argue
about that, and we are right to challenge the insurers
about some of their figures, and how they assess risk and
produce premiums, often with little competition in the
sector. That, however, brings us on to the perhaps bigger
issue of risk to human life, which is writ large in
relation to young people.
What are the reasons for that higher risk and what can be
done about them? Overconfidence in young people may be one
reason—they may feel that having a licence and a car is to
do with becoming an adult, perhaps leading to
overconfidence, in particular among young males, and that
can affect driving. Carrying passengers may also be a
reason for that higher risk. Sixteen to 17-year-olds
carrying passengers are four times more likely to die in a
crash than those not carrying them. That figure must make
us all sit back.
The fatal four reasons for death and injuries on the
road—the major reasons for accidents and deaths on the
roads accepted by the police—are speed and driving too
quickly, drink and drug-driving, not wearing seatbelts, and
driving when distracted, such as when using mobile
telephones, although there are other distractions, too.
Action is needed in all those areas. Better training is
necessary, as are a reassessment of the driving test, which
is being looked at again and is highly relevant, and
educational and public awareness programmes.
One factor has developed since the time of that earlier
Transport Committee inquiry: the growth of telematics-based
insurance, which is insurance where premiums are related to
the nature of the driving skills, rather than simply to the
age of the person. There are 75,000 telematics-based
insurance policies. Perhaps it is connected with the idea
of graduated licences, where new drivers—they are mainly
young but not always—are not able to drive exactly when
they want, with as many passengers as they want, at all
times of day or night, until they have had more experience.
Telematics looking at driver behaviour, together with the
idea of graduated driving licences, could be a solution to
the problem, together with better training and better
awareness of safety.
I will give one word of warning in relation to costs coming
down. Insurers tell us that their premiums are based on the
level of risk assessed. The assumption is that, were some
of the level of risk to be reduced, the premiums would
automatically come down. That does not always happen. In
the past, such as with soft-tissue injury, insurers said
that, if certain measures were enacted, the premiums would
come down; the measures were enacted, but the premiums have
not come down. The insurers have now produced a different
reason; they say insurance tax is a reason for the costs
not coming down. So a word of warning: insurers may say,
“Lessen the risk and the premiums will come down”, but they
might not do it. However, we are looking here at life and
at lessening risk. All those issues must be taken seriously
into account and acted on, so that we do not spend a lot
more years having further debates, in which we repeat what
was said here, say how correct it was and how it is still
correct, but nothing has been done in the meantime. I hope
that we have action.
I congratulate Rhys Parker and the petitioners on putting
the e-petition together to ensure that the issue is
ongoing. Action has to be about improving safety, saving
lives, preventing serious injuries and ensuring that
insurers face up to their responsibilities and keep their
promises.
5.09 pm
-
(Bexhill and Battle)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to speak in this debate. I echo the words
of the hon. Member for Liverpool, Riverside (Mrs Ellman),
who chairs the Transport Committee, of which I am a member,
and congratulate the lead petitioner and all the people who
signed the petition.
I represent a rural constituency of 200 square miles, where
the car is an essential way of life, particularly for the
young, for whom getting out and engaging has never been
more important, given the advent of social media and their
ability to communicate while on their own in their
bedrooms. It is vital that we do everything we can to let
them get out and about and interact with the world around
them. That is more important now than it was when I was
young. We talk in this place, rightly, about social
mobility. In rural environments where people’s ability to
access public transport, let alone pay for it, is somewhat
restricted by the loss of bus services and other
difficulties, it is hugely important for our young people
to be able to go out to work, earn money and get a foot on
the ladder, because without that ability, they may be held
back and not climb the ladder.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for St Austell and
Newquay (Steve Double) on leading off this debate. We ended
up in a discussion about whether tests have become easier.
As we get older, we tend to slip into the mode of saying,
“It was much harder in my day.” When I learned to drive and
took my test, I did not have to reverse into a space—I
found that to be a drawback when I moved to London—and I
was not required to sit a written exam, as our young people
are, so I might argue that tests have actually got harder.
I remember being asked by my examiner what green meant at a
traffic light. If the test has got harder than that, things
are getting better.
I shall focus on the need for the insurance market and
perhaps the Government, through incentives, to ensure that
premiums are based on specific risk rather than a specific
class, which is how young people are currently grouped.
-
Mrs (St Albans)
(Con)
My hon. Friend is making an excellent speech—I hope that I
can contribute to this debate—but premiums actually are not
based solely on risk. It used to be the case, a while ago,
that young men paid higher premiums than young women. Of
course, we were told that that was discriminatory, but it
actually reflected risk—that is what the statistics said.
Sadly, a lot of young women’s premiums had to rise to
ensure that everything was fair and equal. I do not think
that premiums are always based on risk—other things
sometimes come into play.
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right—I wholeheartedly agree.
The Transport Committee and the Petitions Committee met
jointly to hear evidence. We heard from the head of
research at the RAC, who said that
“insurance costs are based on four main things: the cost of
the vehicle; the likelihood of theft; the cost of available
claims generally, if you were to make a claim; and the risk
of the individual.”
It is absolutely clear that, on average, 17-year-old boys
present twice the risk of 17-year-old girls, yet no price
differential at all is offered. As my hon. Friend
mentioned, there was such a differential, but prices had to
be equalised as a result of the gender directive. Of
course, in life, prices tend to go up rather than down. To
a certain extent, she makes a point that I wanted to
make—we should look at individuals’ performance risk and
price insurance comparatively. In the United States of
America, where the insurance market is much more tightly
regulated, there is a requirement to look at specific risk
rather than a class. Will the Minister consider whether the
time is right to look at this issue from a regulatory
perspective?
A 17-year-old new driver is 40% more likely to have an
accident than an 18-year-old, yet I dare say that premiums
do not fall by 40% in that year, because there is a
tendency to look just at age. I received information from
one of the telematics companies that seems to suggest that,
by the time people reach 29, men and women present the same
risk, and the curve drops dramatically.
At the moment, pricing is measured crudely for young
people. Insurers tend to look at young people as students
who live at home, drive small cars and have no driving
experience, and therefore make no allowance for their
performance. That is why telematics is such an exciting
concept. The advent of telematics means that, rather than
putting in place a cap that does not bear any relation to
risk, insurers can reward good drivers and penalise people
who do not drive so safely. With more telematics in place,
1,000 accidents involving death or serious injuries would
be averted, so I dare to suggest that the cost to the
Government would reduce. Telematics have developed to such
an extent that the software can talk to emergency services
to warn them of an event. We all know that early response
to an emergency can save lives and, if we are crude about
it, money, including for the state.
I would be interested to hear from the Minister about what
we can all do and what the Government can do to incentivise
the development of telematics. Given the cost savings that
I mentioned, is there a case for insurance premium tax to
be reduced for drivers who use telematics? VAT is charged
on the box that is required to use telematics, which
reduces the cost benefits, so, again, could some exemption
be made as far as that is concerned?
The insurers’ discount rate was changed from 2.5% to minus
0.7%. Although that happened after the petition was
started, the petitioners would maintain that their
insurance premiums were high enough as they were.
Unfortunately for the Transport Committee, that change was
a live issue for insurers when we heard evidence. I am
pleased that the Government have decided to look again at
that rate, but we made the point to representatives of the
insurers and the Association of British Insurers that their
attempt to state that the change would cause young people’s
insurance premiums to double was rather crude given that
they did not seem to have research to bear that out.
Actually, I do not believe they have provided the research
that they promised to the Committee. We should perhaps
always go hard on insurers and work hard to ensure that the
evidence for the claims that they put out—they always say
they are based on evidence, yet we do not see that
evidence—is in the public domain, so that pricing for young
people is demonstrably linked to the risk that they pose as
individuals.
5.17 pm
-
(Berwickshire, Roxburgh
and Selkirk) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Roger, and to speak in this debate. Members have already
made excellent contributions, and I feel like I am stepping
into an expert field, given that there are so many people
present who work on established Committees that have looked
at this issue in detail. I shall focus first on the
importance of this issue in rural areas, which has been
well covered, and then give a specific example from my own
constituency of a fantastic initiative that Governments
could learn from.
The rural aspect of this issue is particularly important.
As we have heard from most Members, we live in beautiful
constituencies. It is good that we have not all tried to
claim that ours is the most beautiful, as often happens
when we talk about—[Interruption.] There we go—“It’s
mine!”; “Mine!”; “I’m Spartacus!” Apologies, Sir Roger, for
starting that and for any claims that may follow, but the
most beautiful is clearly mine.
The very beauty of the geography presents several
challenges. If someone in a rural area gets a job, a
training opportunity or whatever positive outcome young
people now seek after school, it is more likely to involve
travel over a longer distance, and those areas generally
struggle when it comes to public transport, so having a car
is more of a necessity than ever. With that comes an
increased danger. People can come and drive in my beautiful
constituency, but good luck in getting up to certain
speeds. Young people in particular are getting themselves
killed or injured because suddenly there are open roads in
front of them. There is a particular threat associated with
the beautiful geography we all so enjoy. When it comes to
accessing a car at a reasonable price, because of the cost
of insurance, more and more people are having to buy very
poor quality cars, as all the money goes on insurance.
Therefore, when they have an accident, they are more
vulnerable than they might have been, had the cost of
insurance allowed more of their investment in driving to go
into the vehicle rather than to the insurers.
That is the backdrop, and I am afraid that the road death
and casualty figures are depressing and stark, as is the
detail behind them and how many of those impacted are young
people who have suddenly learned to pass the test. I
remember a scare I had as a young driver, let out for one
of the first times in my mum’s Citroën AX, going across the
hill road between Innerleithen and Heriot, thinking I could
now drive, when of course I was still learning—we are all
still learning. I nearly came off at a corner because of my
inexperience. I got lucky: it was luck that saved me from
being part of a statistic. Young, inexperienced drivers and
open roads are a dangerous combination. This is an area
where Government must be proactive in seeking solutions. It
is great to hear some of the suggestions that have come
forward today.
Let me turn to a specific area in my constituency. On
Saturday 21 May last year, I was invited to attend a young
drivers event at Charterhall near Duns. I went along, as we
do—“That looks interesting; yes, I’ll happily go and do
that”—and found a phenomenal set-up, where the police,
working with local car dealerships and the Institute of
Advanced Motorists, were taking out young drivers from the
age of 14. I will say a bit more about that, but what drove
them to do that was the loss of life: how do we stop young
people getting in a car, thinking—as I did—that they can
drive and then putting themselves and others at risk? One
way is to try to demystify driving to some extent, by
starting people younger.
These were young drivers, from 14 years old, being put in a
car with a highly qualified instructor to learn in an
off-road environment—it was on private land—on a day’s
course. I was so enthused by this, and the next day they
said, “How old are your kids, Calum?” and I said, “My
eldest, Eleanor, is 14.” “Why don’t you bring her
tomorrow?” I thought, “Oh, I don’t know if Eleanor will do
that. Is that cool? Her dad’s an MP; it’s quite a daunting
thing if you’re 14. She might think, ‘Do I really want to
go and try that? I can’t learn until I’m 17 anyway’.” But,
fair play, Eleanor said, “I’d love to do that.” We came
back and spent the whole Sunday there, and at the end of
the day, she drove me—still with the instructor—around this
disused road.
We usually get lots of declarations of interest from people
who are farmers, and many farmers will know—we are talking
about a moveable object on private land—how young or old
they were when they first started helping around the farm,
but what a fantastic idea: start people experiencing
driving early, so that once they are 17 and get their
provisional and then sit and pass their test, it is not as
big a deal. They do not feel the need to go on a road and
hammer it or show off in front of their friends; they have
de-risked it.
I saw that project in action, and my daughter Eleanor, who
is now 15, experienced it. What a fantastic initiative.
Since then I have been working with the key people
involved. I want to mention them, first because the
Government may want to reach out and have a look at what
they are doing, but they also deserve phenomenal credit.
Andy McLean, the local area commander for the police in the
Scottish borders, is a driving force for it. The police see
added benefits, because suddenly they are working with and
sitting alongside a young person in a car, not trying to
catch them out. Local bobbies on the beat are not quite as
prevalent as they once were, so the scheme enables them to
build relationships and trust in a different way. However,
the programme could not happen without the support of a
certain John Cleland. I do know if any hon. Members know
John Cleland, but they should google him and look at what a
phenomenal driver he was, and still is. He was a British
touring car championship winner twice—and he was robbed a
third time, as he says; there are fantastic videos on that.
John has put a lot of personal effort and even money into
getting the programme up and running, working with the
Institute of Advanced Motorists. The next step was to apply
for funding through Transport Scotland—there is a devolved
powers element involved—and we are now taking that initial
piece of work and building it into a broader programme. The
Scottish Qualifications Authority is looking at putting
together a package for schools, and headteachers in the
borders have been approached to ensure that there is time
in the curriculum for young people to come and do that. In
the months ahead—the next session is in April—young people
from across the borders will come again to Charterhall.
Volvo is stepping up, with fantastic sponsorship in terms
of cars, but the money from Transport Scotland was
critical. We are trying to take what is clearly a fantastic
idea and put it into something more credible and bigger.
I commend the programme to the Government and hon. Friends
and Members, who should look at such a programme, because
it is exactly the type of thing that all Members have
referenced. How do we make driving safer? If we make it
safer, premiums will come down—and, above all, we will save
lives, which is what it is all about. I would be happy to
provide the Minister with more details and to invite
Ministers—the Scottish Transport Minister will be coming to
one of the upcoming sessions. If we can make some headway,
the scheme can be replicated, and it absolutely will make a
difference.
5.27 pm
-
Mrs (St Albans)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Roger, in this important debate. While I disagree with
capping fees, it is immensely important that we look at how
the insurance industry treats our young drivers, because as
I said when I intervened on my hon. Friend the Member for
Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman), it is not treating them
fairly. A lot of things have come into play since the
gender directive. We all remember the adverts with pink
ladies and all the rest of it, where young ladies and women
could get car insurance that reflected the risks they were
likely to encounter, and surely that is what insurance
should be about.
As the hon. Member for Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk
(Calum Kerr) said, we have all been young drivers. We were
all pretty young and stupid then, and we learnt to drive as
we went along. I am certain that every single one of us had
a few near-misses or skirmishes with gate posts—there were
none of the reversing sensors that we may have now. As the
hon. Member for Liverpool, Riverside (Mrs Ellman) said,
this has been going on for a very long time. There is
nothing new in young people being more likely to make
mistakes and slip-ups.
May I say that I have the best and most beautiful
constituency? But I think I also have the worst roads.
Previously, roads certainly did not have the craters—they
are not potholes—we have in Hertfordshire and many other
parts of the country. Road maintenance must be part of
this. Road markings are often poor or obliterated, lighting
is often poor and vegetation is often not cut back. That is
all part of the picture for young and inexperienced
drivers. If a road hazard sign has been defaced or is not
visible because of vegetation, that is no help to a young,
inexperienced driver.
Insurance companies are getting away with murder. We have
not mentioned the fact that there are criminals who ram the
back of cars—and who better to target than a young person
in a scruffy old car? There are people who cry wolf about
injuries that they certainly did not experience. All that
has been factored in and spread across premiums. All of us
have been in the position where our driving was a little
rockier than it might have been. Perhaps now we should
accept that insurance should spread across the whole age
group, and that is where I find sympathy with the direction
of the petition.
I am worried that this is a social mobility issue as much
as anything else. In my constituencies such as mine, where
the average house price is more than £550,000 and where
£1,200 does not rent an awful lot of property, young people
who want to leave home or get jobs are priced further out.
The golden rule is: the nearer the train station—which has
wonderful links to London—the more expensive the rental. As
a result, if young people—this is up to age 25—leave home,
perhaps when they are in relationships, they are forced
further and further away. The majority of my economically
active constituents will go to London; there is a huge
amount of churn in my constituency. People who are less
economically advantaged commute in from areas where rents
are less expensive, to do some of the key jobs of such
constituencies, on a lower pay grade. So there is the
perverse situation where people with less in their pocket,
who live in areas where car theft is potentially more
likely, are penalised for coming to do care work or other
essential jobs in my constituency, because they have to
drive in from further away. The whole picture needs to be
taken into account by the insurance industry.
It seems unfair that, because of the high rents in areas
such as mine, young drivers who have to rent in a less
salubrious place than they might like—I am sure we all want
to live in a nice area—should then have that weighted in
their car insurance, because of the actions of those who
come into that area and decide to deface, take or wreck
their car, or use it for a criminal purpose. I do not
believe that the insurance companies play a fair game. That
is why the drift of the petition is extremely important.
-
My hon. Friend is making an excellent point, but is she
worried, as I am, that where people live is not the only
factor in the situation? The additional premiums force
young people to buy older cars, and if they do that, they
are generally buying cars that are less safe.
-
Mrs Main
My hon. Friend makes a pertinent point, but for many young
people the price of the car is the least of their worries.
A fairly reasonable little runaround can be had for less
than £1,000, which is about 50% of the cost of insuring the
thing. They buy older cars because they have to, but
unfortunately those may not have all the gizmos that make
them safer or easier to drive, such as the reverse parking
sensors that I mentioned. Those are beyond the wildest
dreams of many young people, without—this is the thrust of
my comments—the bank of mum and dad. I am a bank of mum and
dad, as I am sure are many of the right hon. and hon.
Members taking part in the debate.
My son is 21—and probably will not thank me for mentioning
him in the debate. We bought him his car and paid the
insurance premiums. We helped him with petrol when he was
18 and studying for his A-levels, because I did not want
him to worry about whether he could pay for his car, and I
wanted him to get to places safely. I have four children,
who are all grown up now, but, particularly in the case of
my daughters, I did not want them to be at the mercy of a
bus that might not turn up if they had been to
entertainment away from where we live.
Many a parent has such a dilemma. Often, perversely, the
safest way for young people to get home at night is to
drive. Buses often do not run into the rural areas, of
which there are some in my constituency. Let us be
reasonable: if young people are out, at 20, a 10 o’clock
curfew is not going to happen, is it? That is what makes me
say that insurance premiums should be spread between all of
us. Parents want our young people to get home. We want
people to be able to rent a property or a room further out.
To bring the argument back to my 21-year-old son, he has
gone on to a higher-level apprenticeship, and he could not
have got access to it, up in Macclesfield, if he could not
drive. It is vital—otherwise, many people would not be able
to take up opportunities such as apprenticeships or other
work that they wanted to do. Mention has been made of
carers working in rural environments; such opportunities
are not open to young people if premiums are so high.
Eighty-six per cent. of St Albans residents have access to
a car or van, which is above the county average, and 89% of
residents aged over 17 have a full driving licence. The
roads in my area are incredibly congested. Therefore, not
only is there competition to get to the jobs and to live in
areas that people can afford; they are dicing with the M25
and the M1, some of the biggest and most difficult
stretches of motorway in the country. Some of the comments
that have been made in the debate about expanding people’s
driving experience are hugely important.
I am concerned that, as with many aspects of life, if
someone’s parents can afford it, they will be able to
afford to be mobile and live somewhere affordable. The
children of those parents will have opportunities that
other young people do not have. Perversely, although in
areas such as mine there is a deficit of blue-collar
workers —there is no trouble in finding a job in St Albans,
which has almost zero unemployment if a young person wants
to work in such industries as caring or hospitality—people
in those jobs probably do not live in St Albans. The point
I am making is for young people everywhere, because not
everyone has access to the bank of mum and dad.
This a question of whether we are truly interested in
equality—in this case, equality of opportunity. The
insurance companies are having a merry game of it. I know
that this debate is about young people and not elderly
people, but, believe me, there are a lot of bashed up cars
in Waitrose car parks as a result of people suddenly taking
on the delights of an automatic car, because they are
rather elderly and their hip or knee does not want to press
a clutch any more. I can say that because my eldest son
works in Waitrose, and it is amazing how often it happens.
I am sure that many people will have seen similar things.
The elderly are driving for far longer than they would have
years ago. They, too, are forced into it by a lack of bus
services and so on, but in many cases people who go over to
an automatic car have problems with the premiums.
We accept that there are times in our lives when a bump and
a dink are more likely to happen. I would like a more
pragmatic approach from the insurance companies. They need
to be more accountable and to justify the way premiums
work. It is disgraceful to just accept a set of statistics
that says, “If a person is a young driver, they’re more
likely to have an accident; therefore, we’ll just price
certain young people out of being mobile.” I would not want
to think that young people can be in the privileged
position of being free to go where they want only if they
happen to have a bank of mum and dad. We should all be
concerned about that, because there will be huge parts of
the country where young people will probably drive without
insurance, and that is the worst possible thing for
everybody.
5.38 pm
-
Stuart Blair Donaldson (West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine)
(SNP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Roger, and to speak in the debate.
I must declare an interest as a 25-year-old driver who has
just renewed his car insurance. It was not as bad as I
thought it would be, which is good to report. I do not
expect any hon. Members present today to lend me their car,
for any amount of money, but the fact that 185,000 people
signed the petition shows how much of an issue insurance is
for young people. I grew up in and represent a rural area
and I know how important cars are to enable young people to
get around for work, leisure and social life. In rural
Aberdeenshire, much of that takes place in Aberdeen, and
people need a car to get there. I used to have to walk for
40 minutes to get the bus before I could drive, so this is
a real issue.
The increased use of cars in every aspect of young people’s
lives does increase risk. However, like any other age
group, young people are not all the same; there are good
drivers and bad drivers. Obviously, the statistics show
that young people are more likely to have an accident, but
as the hon. Member for Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman)
mentioned, using black boxes to measure the driving ability
of individuals is so important. The son of one of my
members of staff has just passed his driving test and has a
black box in his car; he refuses to let his mum use the car
because she puts the bad driving statistics up. It is
important to say that not all bad drivers are young drivers
and not all novice drivers are young drivers, although the
cost of insurance tends to go down once somebody reaches
25.
Car insurance costs rose by 102% from 1994 to 2011; as has
been mentioned, that is in no small part due to whiplash
claims, which now add approximately 20% to each policy.
That is particularly damaging to young people—96% of young
drivers now think they are being priced off the road. The
issue is further compounded by the increase in the standard
rate of insurance premium tax from 10% to 12% from June,
which will hit individuals with the highest insurance
premiums hardest: young people and those living in
high-crime areas. That, along with a whole lot of other
things, is hurting people.
It has been said that millennials—my generation—will
probably be the first generation who are worse off than
those who came before them. We have to look at that as a
whole when it comes to premiums for young drivers.
Obviously, many jobs require individuals to be able to
drive; I would not be able to do my job if I could not
drive. Being able to drive can still be the difference
between successfully securing a job and failing to secure
one.
As has been said, the issue is fundamentally about social
mobility. Making longer-distance travel easier for those
without access to quick, regular or close-by public
transport could increase their chances of employment.
Another problem that young people face, particularly in
rural areas, is sometimes having to wait up to five months
to get a driving test. As hon. Members will imagine, that
increases their frustration and also means that they have
to spend more money on taking top-up tests.
I would like to see powers in this area devolved so that
they can be better tailored to rural areas in Scotland and
Scottish drivers. I learned to drive when I was 16 in a
field with my grandpa, who is a farmer and a former Member;
unfortunately, it did not help me to pass my test first
time. However, I thought what my hon. Friend the Member for
Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk (Calum Kerr) said about
14 year-olds being taught how to drive in school was
interesting. I was taught how to cycle in school time—I did
my cycling proficiency test in primary school; I do not
know how many other hon. Members did that—so I thought that
idea was interesting and should be considered more widely.
I have disagreed with some points that have been made, such
as preventing younger people from driving at night. Where I
come from in the north-east of Scotland—
-
Mrs Main
It is dark all the time.
-
Stuart Blair Donaldson
It is dark all the time—absolutely. In winter, it gets
light after 8 o’clock in the morning and gets dark at about
4 o’clock in the afternoon. Not driving at night would be a
real issue and prevent a lot of young people from working.
The constituency that I represent, West Aberdeenshire and
Kincardine, has the second highest number of road deaths in
the UK, for which there are a number of reasons. Councils,
the police, the fire service and the Scottish ambulance
service in Grampian run a programme called “Safe Drive Stay
Alive”. It has been going for 11 or 12 years; it was
certainly on when I was at school. It brings local schools
together and shows them a presentation that, to be honest,
is pretty horrific. It has graphic images of car accidents,
speeches from people who have lost loved ones and speeches
from people who have been paralysed by car accidents.
The programme has a huge impact on young drivers, and to
some extent I think it is effective in scaring young people
into realising that, when they are learning to drive and
when they pass their test, they are in charge of a machine
that can quite easily kill somebody. It is important to
emphasise that learning how to pass a test is not the same
as learning how to drive; I am still learning how to drive
to some extent.
-
I absolutely agree with the hon. Gentleman on curfews. The
analysis seems to show that telematics companies that put
curfew penalties in place were causing more dangerous
driving, because young people were trying to get back in
time. I applaud the move to give people hours on top—almost
pay-as-you-go—as a reward for good driving, rather than
curfews or things like that.
-
Stuart Blair Donaldson
The hon. Gentleman makes an important point. When I was at
school, I had friends who were involved in serious car
accidents, and somebody a couple of years above me was
killed in a car accident. It is so important that, when
educating young people, we strongly emphasise that driving
is an incredibly important part of life, but that they need
to take it seriously, be careful and show respect to other
road users.
There are some other issues that do not pertain to young
people. As one who comes from a rural area, I find Sunday
drivers coming out to the country from Aberdeen incredibly
frustrating. When people do not know how to drive on
country roads it is incredibly dangerous; there can be
really sharp bends, tractors or sheep on the roads. The
issue is not all about young people; we need to look at
this much more widely and consider all the options.
5.47 pm
-
(Birmingham,
Northfield) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Roger. I add my congratulations to the hon. Member for St
Austell and Newquay (Steve Double), and I congratulate the
Petitions Committee and the Transport Committee on their
work in bringing the debate. I also congratulate all hon.
Members for the contributions they have made.
The petition that gave rise to the debate raises so many
important issues about the astronomical prices of car
insurance premiums for 18 to 25-year-olds. Those premiums
have been shooting up while wages have often stagnated for
people in that age group and their overall cost of living
has increased—a point made ably by the hon. Member for St
Albans (Mrs Main).
The debate also takes place against a background of changes
in the way many young people look at questions of their own
personal mobility. The hon. Member for St Austell and
Newquay mentioned driving being a “rite of passage”; I am
not so sure that that is the case for all young people
these days. Driving is one of a range of different options
that they see for getting about, and looking at things in
that way is not necessarily a bad thing; there are some
journeys for which the use of a car is not the most
appropriate. I guess that hefty insurance premiums are at
least one of the factors that has encouraged some of those
changes of attitude. That said, I am certainly not arguing
that there is nothing to worry about.
As many hon. Members have said, the different options on
how to get about are not equal everywhere; they are greater
in urban areas than in rural ones. For many young people,
access to a car is not only about the ability to have a
social life—it can make the difference as to whether they
can get to college or to a job. Indeed, if we look at the
data map for this petition, we see that many of the 180,000
signatories were from outside major cities, with a
particular concentration, interestingly, in the north-west
of England. No doubt many of the signatories to the
petition feel that they cannot overcome the huge barrier of
big insurance premiums that prevents them from accessing a
social life, employment and education.
The idea that it is easy to get about without a car in
towns is sometimes overstated. It is often thought to be
easiest in London. In many ways, that is true; many of us
look with great envy at the state of public transport in
the city. The way that buses are regulated and operate in
London is something many of us aspire to. Who knows—if the
Bus Services Bill finds its way through the House without
amendment, we may get nearer to that situation. However,
when the Petitions Committee and Transport Committee took
oral evidence on this petition, they heard that many young
people—even in London—feel they have to rely on cars to get
to work. Some 22% of 17 to 34-year-olds travel to work in
London by car and feel they need to do so.
It is right that we address this issue. The Petitions
Committee and the Transport Committee heard some really
interesting evidence from a whole range of quarters about
the different ways in which it can be addressed. For
example, the Wheels 2 Work scheme showed some really
imaginative thinking about how young people’s personal
mobility can be increased, often by the use of two-wheel
transport—not simply bicycles, but electric bikes,
motorcycles and scooters—as well as four-wheel transport.
It is doing some imaginative work on that, to provide young
people with access to that kind of mobility.
-
Although I agree with the hon. Gentleman and congratulate
Wheels 2 Work on its excellent work, that project is quite
sparse and gives wheels for only six months. One in six
people says they need a car for an apprenticeship, which
often lasts for two years, so the two things do not marry
up. Although the project is good, it is not overly
practical, particularly in rural areas.
-
The hon. Lady is right. Indeed, one of the points that
Wheels 2 Work made when it gave evidence was that if the
project is going to make a major difference, it needs a lot
more backing so that it can both offer longevity of access
to transport and reach different corners of the country. I
simply raised it to say that such schemes are part of the
picture and are things we need to think about.
The issue of prohibitively high insurance premiums for cars
remains. A number of hon. Members today made important
points about how, whether or not a cap on insurance
premiums is the right way to go—the majority who mentioned
it came out against—there is a need, at the very least, for
greater transparency in the insurance industry about the
way premiums are put together, the calculations that lead
to different kinds of premium across different classes of
driver and the impact of insurance premium taxes. We need
that greater transparency at a policy level, but perhaps
insurance companies and brokers should also think about it
at the individual level, so that individual car owners and
drivers can find out why a premium shot up from one year to
the next and what increased risk was identified at that
time.
Be that as it may, the insurance industry will still come
back to the point—it has come up several times today, and
rightly so—that, statistically, young drivers are much more
likely to be involved in road incidents than those over the
age of 25. As we know, the statistics are particularly
stark among young men. There is, in truth, no silver bullet
to tackle that issue. It needs to be tackled on a whole
range of fronts and looked at in a rounded-out way. That is
why many of us have felt for some time that there needs to
be a proper Green Paper on young drivers and their safety,
looking at the options for the future.
If we go back to March 2013, the headline of a Department
for Transport press release stated:
“Government to overhaul young driver rules in bid to
improve safety and cut insurance costs: Green paper on
improving the safety and reducing risks to young drivers
launched.”
Four years later, we are still waiting to see that Green
Paper to explore the options for improving the safety of
newly qualified drivers. We have never seen the result of
that launch. At the end of that year, pursuant to a
question I asked, the then Secretary of State for Transport
explained that his Department was still
“wrestling with how to make things safer while not unduly
restricting the freedom of our young people…We are finding
this a difficult balance, with passionate voices on both
sides. We will issue a paper when we have considered this
further.”—[Official Report, 18 December 2013; Vol. 572, c.
629W.]
Four years on, despite calls from road safety campaigners
and the insurance industry, the Government appear to have
stopped considering the issue, and there is still no sign
of that Green Paper on young drivers. If the Government
really wish to do something about this critical concern,
one of the core issues with the cost of car insurance for
18 to 25-year-olds, I ask the Minister again: is there
going to be a Green Paper on the safety of young drivers?
If so, when can we expect to see it? If not, why not? It
seems an obvious thing that the Government should be doing.
What kind of thing could the Green Paper address?
Telematics or in-car black boxes have come up several times
in the debate. They can enable insurers to assess real-time
data on an individual’s driving behaviour and charge more
accurate risk-based premiums. As we have heard, in some
cases new drivers can see their premiums fall by a fifth or
more as a result of telematics. Anything that can enable
responsible young drivers to be charged fairer prices for
their insurance and bring down the number of road incidents
has to be a good thing.
Black boxes are not, of course, necessarily a cost-free
option. Nick Moger, the founder and chairman of Marmalade,
a car insurance company specifically targeting young and
learner drivers, explained in his written evidence to the
joint Petitions and Transport Committee inquiry that black
boxes are currently subject to VAT, which pushes up costs
for insurers and young drivers. The question must arise of
whether it is appropriate to remove VAT on technology that
can prevent or at least reduce road incidents and save
lives.
[Mr in the Chair]
The other issue that comes up is of course that telematics
can often be fitted most reliably to new cars—cars that
young people are often unable to afford, unless, as the
hon. Member for St Albans said, they have access to a well
capitalised bank of mum and dad. Telematics as a solution,
or at least as a contribution to a solution, to reduce
insurance premiums is not necessarily one that is available
equally to all new young drivers, so it could be part of
the package but not the whole package.
This week, the Vehicle Technology and Aviation Bill is in
Committee; it had its Second Reading a couple of weeks ago.
A number of us are serving on the Committee and looking at
the Bill. The Bill itself looks at other things that could
have a major impact by, we hope, reducing the number of
young people involved in incidents on our roads, making our
roads safer and perhaps reducing the cost of premiums. The
Bill looks at how the insurance treatment of automated
vehicles could change in the future. We already know that
the use of technology to assist drivers can have a big
impact in promoting road safety and reducing the risk of
incidents. I am thinking of things such as autonomous
emergency braking and so on. However, we are now looking to
a future that not only involves those driver assistance
mechanisms, but in which the ability to be in a car and
travel from A to B may not depend even on having a driving
licence in the form that we know it. The car itself—the
vehicle itself—could be doing the driving for some or all
of the journey. That has huge potential to improve safety,
but again it is really important that the insurance
consequences are got right. The Bill looks at how that can
be done, and it is hoped that, if the Bill gets it right,
that could contribute to falling insurance premiums as
safety increases through automated vehicles. If we get it
wrong, it could be another way of insurance premiums
rising.
There are other things that a Green Paper could address if
the Government produced one. The question of graduated
licensing has come up again today. That involves looking at
how and when new drivers or young new drivers can drive,
having passed their test. There could be restrictions on
the times of day when they could do so or on the number of
passengers they could have in the car with them. It is not
an easy question, and there are real concerns about what it
could lead to, such as unreasonable curfews on young
drivers. What if a graduated licensing scheme leads to a
young driver being forbidden to travel at night and they
work in a bar in a rural area? The wrong sort of graduated
licensing scheme could restrict opportunities and be quite
unfair.
-
Mrs Main
The hon. Gentleman is making some excellent points. My
other concern about that proposal is this. We encourage
people to car share, but if, for example, students were
forced to drive their own cars individually instead of
getting into a car with a group of other students to go off
to college for lectures or whatever they were going to do,
we would be increasing the number of cars on the road,
which in areas such as mine is the last thing anyone wants.
-
The hon. Lady is right: all aspects of graduated licensing
need to be considered. A menu of different kinds of
graduated licensing could be brought in. I will say this,
though. Although it is right to be aware of the drawbacks
of the different kinds, it is also the case that, in a
number of other countries, the introduction of different
forms of graduated licensing has promoted road safety and
reduce the prevalence of new drivers and, in particular,
young drivers being involved in incidents. That is why many
safety organisations, the insurance industry and, indeed,
research from the Government’s own Transport Research
Laboratory have said that it needs to be considered
seriously.
We are back to why we need a Green Paper. A Green Paper is
just that. It is not a blueprint or a set of specific
proposals; it is a discussion document that lays out the
kinds of option that need to be looked at and the kinds of
area where Government action may be necessary, and puts
that out to consultation. Given that the insurance
industry, road safety campaigners and so many others have
been calling for this for years and given that the
Government themselves felt in 2013 that producing a Green
Paper was the right thing to do, I simply do not see why we
are still waiting for one to be published.
On road safety, there have been important initiatives in
relation to the practical driving test: the greater focus
on independent driving, including the use of sat-nav, as
well as time spent on high-speed roads other than
motorways. Anything that allows examiners to make a better
assessment of a candidate’s ability to drive on all types
of road is important. All those things should be able to
reduce the number of casualties and collisions on our
roads.
The hon. Member for St Austell and Newquay was right in one
of the first things he said: all too often, the driving
test tests a driver’s ability to pass the test, rather than
testing their ability to drive. That is why we can be much
more imaginative about how the driving test is developed.
Part of that goes back to whether graduated licensing could
come into it. It also raises questions about whether speed
awareness can be incorporated more into the process of
learning to drive, and whether the concept of appropriate
speed, as well as the concept of speed limits, could form
part of it.
Of course, hon. Members have also been right to say that,
beyond the question of the test itself and learning for the
test, there can be all sorts of other initiatives in
relation to early driving to promote the idea that, when a
young person gets their provisional licence, that will not
necessarily be the first time they have sat in the driving
seat of a car and been able to get some experience. I was
really interested to hear about the early drive courses
that take place up in Duns and the involvement of John
Cleland. It is interesting that they are taking place in
Duns: Charterhall was of course the circuit where one of
the most famous racing drivers of all time, Jim Clark,
learned his craft. I am absolutely convinced that that kind
of early drive course can help.
At the other end of the scale is the Safe Drive Stay Alive
initiative talked about by the hon. Member for West
Aberdeenshire and Kincardine (Stuart Blair Donaldson), who
speaks for the Scottish National party. I have seen the
work of Safe Drive Stay Alive and the impact of the really
graphic way in which it portrays what happens if we lose a
loved one in a road incident—the impact that that can have
on young people in schools. Again, it is right that we
support something that can contribute to reducing the
number of incidents.
This issue has to be tackled on so many different fronts.
My hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool, Riverside (Mrs
Ellman) was right to draw attention to the Transport
Committee’s work on enforcement, because part of the
picture is ensuring that the regulations that we have are
properly enforced. It is very difficult to reconcile proper
enforcement, on which the Transport Committee has done some
really important work, with the cuts in the number of
traffic police; they have been cut by about one third
outside London. If we want to make our roads safer, part of
that is about the way we train our drivers, part of it is
about the way they are examined and part of it is about the
technology available in motor vehicles, but a vital part of
it is how we enforce the laws that are there. Frankly, the
cuts we have seen in traffic policing are incompatible with
that.
Another thing that is part of the equation and that we need
to bear in mind is the question of road safety targets. If
I am right that the strategy we need to employ to make our
roads safer involves different agencies—examiners, local
authorities, the police, the insurance industry and many
others—is it not time that we have shared responsibility
for making our roads safer? In other parts of the world and
international bodies that we are part of, road safety
targets are seen as something should be supported. We used
to have road safety targets in this country until they were
abolished by the coalition Government. They played an
important role in focusing minds, and contributed
indirectly to the fall in the number of people killed or
seriously injured as recorded in the casualty statistics
that we had in this country—those statistics are now sadly
starting to level-off and there are worrying signs that
they are starting to go in the other direction.
This has been a constructive debate and some important
points have been made. There is no silver bullet. In
conclusion, the elements that could help to address the
issues we have talked about today are as follows. In the
insurance industry, we could see far greater transparency
at both a policy level and an individual level. On a
governmental level, it is time we had a Green Paper on
young drivers so that Government can have a rounded look at
what is required. That could, and should, include the
potential of telematics and graduated driver licensing for
improving safety on our roads and reducing incidents among
young people. It is important that we get the Vehicle
Technology and Aviation Bill right to ensure that it leads
to the reduction of premiums for automated vehicles, and
not the opposite. It is important that we look
imaginatively at improvements to the driving test and at
ways of educating young drivers before they have their
provisional licence and in post-test learning. We need to
ensure that the right numbers of traffic police are there
to enforce the laws we have, and it is time that we brought
back road safety targets so that we can have a vision for
zero being killed or seriously injured on our roads. Other
countries have piloted and pioneered “Vision Zero” and
there is no reason why we should not have it as well.
Bringing in road safety targets is a direct way in which we
can contribute to a strategy for achieving that vision.
6.13 pm
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport
(Andrew Jones)
I thank and congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for St
Austell and Newquay (Steve Double) for opening this debate
on the important subject of the cost of car insurance for
young people. I also thank all hon. Members for the very
good debate we have had this afternoon.
I reassure hon. Members that we take the cost of car
insurance for young people—indeed, for all motorists—very
seriously. Ultimately, the issue is about road safety and
recognising that many people lose their lives or are
seriously injured on our roads each year and that behind
each statistic there is a shattered life and a shattered
family—this is not just about numbers, but about people.
I congratulate the original petitioner, Rhys Michael
Parker, who described his own experience of finding motor
insurance costly to obtain as a novice driver. I recognise
that, like Mr Parker, many young people use their cars to
access work, education, caring responsibilities or even
just the fun of social activities.
I remember receiving my driving licence—that moment might
be 33 years ago to the week for my hon. Friend, but it is
almost 36 years ago to the week for me; I took a moment to
work that out. Getting a driving licence is a fantastic
moment of opportunity in someone’s life and that is why we
are committed to bearing down on the cost of car insurance
for young drivers. In order to do so, the Government have
identified the root causes of high insurance premiums and
they are addressing them, as I will discuss.
The first root cause is the alarming rate at which
fraudulent, minor and exaggerated whiplash claims have
increased in the UK. The scale of the problem is
highlighted by the fact that 90% of recent personal injury
claims relating to road traffic collisions were labelled as
whiplash or soft tissue injuries to the neck and back. The
magnitude of costs that insurers inherit from whiplash
claims are then often passed on to their consumers through
higher insurance premiums. To tackle the issue, we recently
introduced the Prisons and Courts Bill to Parliament; it is
having its Second Reading today and includes measures to
cut fraudulent, minor and exaggerated whiplash claims. That
will generate estimated savings to insurers of around £1
billion per year. In this debate, colleagues have said that
savings are not always passed on. We expect insurers to
fully pass those savings on to motorists through lower
premiums. The point was well made by colleagues. I am
pleased to inform the House that three leading insurers
have already committed to do that.
I would now like to address another of the root causes: the
high levels of risk associated with younger drivers.
Colleagues have highlighted the well-known fact that
younger drivers are over-represented in road collisions.
Car drivers aged 17 to 24 are four times more likely to be
killed or seriously injured compared with drivers aged 25
or over. That is a terrible statistic and we should not in
any way be complacent about it. Higher levels of risk
associated with younger drivers have resulted in higher
insurance premiums. While we do have some of the safest
roads in the world in the UK, we are determined to make
them safer; addressing the cost of car insurance is one
additional factor spurring everybody on.
I have been asked about a Green Paper, but frankly it has
been overtaken by events. We have no intention of
publishing a Green Paper because we published the British
road safety statement in December 2015. It included
proposals aimed at younger drivers—indeed, all drivers—for
making our roads safer, such as improving the safety of
young and novice drivers both before and after they take
their test. It includes our intention to commission a £2
million research programme to test the effectiveness of a
range of technological solutions and educational and
behavioural measures, including telematics, to improve the
safety of young and novice drivers. Those interventions
will be designed with careful consideration of behavioural
change.
It might be helpful if I explain a bit more about how
telematics policies work and play an important role in
helping young drivers to access lower insurance premiums.
Telematics is a key part of the future and I strongly
support the expansion of telematics products in the
marketplace. Telematics devices allow information on
driving styles and behaviours—such as speed, braking,
acceleration and where and when the vehicle is being
driven—to be monitored and considered alongside the
traditional risk factors that insurance companies consider,
such as the driver’s age, to set premiums that are more
tailored to the risk of the driver than traditional motor
insurance policies.
We are seeing an increasing take-up of telematics. The
technology is increasingly being chosen by young drivers as
a way of ensuring that their premiums are lower. In March
2016, the British Insurance Brokers’ Association reported
that there were 455,000 live telematics policies in the
UK—up 40% in just two years. However, that needs to be put
into the context of how many policies there are in the
marketplace to show how much progress we need to make to
encourage their wider use. We are not in any way
complacent, but I recognise that young people benefit from
telematics.
A number of organisations have lobbied me about the
insurance premium tax rate exemption for young drivers with
telematics policies. It is important to stress that IPT is
a tax on the insurer, and there is no guarantee that it
will be passed on to the customer. I also have to say that
taxation is a matter for Treasury colleagues.
We are focusing our efforts on a number of other measures
to ensure that younger people are fit and safe to drive. We
encourage learners to do more on-road, pre-test practice
and to practise in a wider range of conditions. As has been
mentioned, we have recently consulted on allowing learner
drivers on to motorways—with an approved driving
instructor, of course—and we are analysing the results.
That is very important given that people can go along at a
low speed and then suddenly encounter what can be very
difficult driving conditions. It can be pretty scary,
although it is worth noting that the strategic road network
in this country is the safest it has ever been.
We are ensuring that driving tests assess the skills needed
for safe, independent driving and are raising standards
across the driver and rider training industries.
Importantly, we are looking at changing driving tests,
which evolve continually. We have been trialling more
free-flow driving and using fewer set pieces.
Notwithstanding the parking issue that my hon. Friend the
Member for Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) mentioned, we
are looking to remove some set pieces so that people have
more understanding and experience of free-flow driving and
are more road-savvy. That will include taking instructions
from a sat-nav during the test. We are trying to make the
test more reactive to current technology and the benefits
that it can bring.
We are also looking to identify innovative applications,
such as augmented and virtual reality, to improve drivers’
hazard perception—that is, the skills required to correctly
assess a situation. That could mean using technology from
the games industry to complement the existing on-road
practice and the testing regime. We are always looking at
finding ways to get people better prepared for the
marvellous freedom ticket that is their licence.
-
I agree that looking at ways in which the test can evolve
and exposing the person taking the test to the greater
range of experiences that they face when driving are
important. However, could I take the Minister back to
graduated licensing? A focus of the call for a Green Paper
was that the pros and cons of graduated licensing need to
be weighed up and a decision made. If the Minister has
turned his face against the idea of a Green Paper, does
that mean that the Government have completely rejected the
possibility of looking at graduated driving licences, or
are they still prepared to look at it, but want to do it
differently?
-
We have been considering the idea of graduated driving
licences but I am not inclined to support them, because we
want to strike the right balance in respect of freedom for
young drivers. As we have discussed, many people need their
vehicles, particularly in rural areas; rather than imposing
post-test restrictions on novice drivers, our efforts are
all about improving driver training and testing so that
people are better able to benefit from a driving licence.
I am not looking to introduce a graduated driving licence
system in the UK. We have heard from colleagues how that
might impact on people who live in darkness for part of the
year as they perhaps seek to get to shift work early. All
those factors have impacted on and led to our decision not
to go down the route of a graduated driving licence.
-
Mrs Ellman
I note what the Minister said about the need for better
training. Does that extend to training after people have
passed their driving test?
-
Yes. I am very keen to encourage people to do more
learning. We continually learn as drivers and get better
continually at assessing risk. I highlight the Pass Plus
scheme, which colleagues have mentioned. Pass Plus has six
modules, which broaden the range of driving skills that
people need. It covers driving in town, in all weathers, on
rural roads, driving at night, driving on dual carriageways
and driving on motorways. The Driver and Vehicle Standards
Agency issues people with a certificate to say that they
have been through the course. That can often be used to
access lower insurance premiums, so yes, I entirely agree
with the principle.
A number of factors demonstrate that we are committed to
improving the safety of all road users and especially those
who are at greater risk, such as young drivers. I very much
like the road safety training highlighted by the hon.
Member for Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk (Calum Kerr).
I am aware of other schemes around the country. He offered
me a visit—well, he lives in a very nice part of the world
and I like the idea of visiting, so if he lets me know,
that might be a possibility. To make a cheeky comment, I
like finding ways to show that our two fine countries are
stronger together. I am very keen to take ideas from all
parts of the world, not just all parts of the UK, if they
can make our roads safer. I am aware of comparable
schemes—including in London, again with links into
motorsport—that are all aimed at younger drivers, and I
recognise the importance of those.
We are seeking to improve the safety of all road users and
especially younger drivers, who are more vulnerable and at
risk of being in a collision. Nine out of 10 road
collisions have an element of human error, so if we can cut
the amount of human error, it will have a huge impact on
road safety. I therefore agree with the points made by the
hon. Member for Birmingham, Northfield (Richard Burden)
about the Vehicle Technology and Aviation Bill, which is an
important Bill that we have to get right for the future.
The benefits of connected and autonomous vehicles will be
profound, but the set of changes is also profound. The Bill
is in Committee now.
We are seeking to lower the risk by making progress in
ensuring that people are better able to drive and, through
that, they will pay less for their insurance premium. My
hon. Friend the Member for Bexhill and Battle asked about
the discount rate, which has to be considered in the
pricing of insurance. I am aware that the recent change in
the discount rate and the likely impact on the insurance
industry were discussed in some depth in the evidence
session last month. I am therefore keen to set out the
Government’s reasons for the change and a number of actions
being taken as a priority.
The Ministry of Justice leads on this issue, but let me
explain: the discount rate is used to convert a
compensation award made to an injured person for future
losses into a present value lump sum payment, which
reflects the return that the person could expect to earn if
investing the lump sum today. Last month, the Lord
Chancellor notified the market of a change in the discount
rate from 2.5% to minus 0.75%. She made it clear that the
decision was made in accordance with national law, given
her legal duty to consider only the impact on injured
parties. The decision was made following a Ministry of
Justice public consultation in 2012, the report of an
expert panel in 2015 and the responses of statutory
consultees, Her Majesty’s Treasury and the Government
Actuary. The review process has been lengthy and extremely
thorough, reflecting the complexity of the subject matter
and the importance that is placed on the decision.
We recognise that the change is likely to have an impact on
the insurance industry, resulting in a knock-on effect on
some consumers but I must stress that, under law, the Lord
Chancellor cannot consider the impact on defendants such as
the insurance industry, only the impact on the injured
party. I also stress that any effect of the change in the
discount rate on the cost of insurance premiums, including
car insurance premiums for young drivers, is a matter for
insurers to consider.
-
I am grateful to the Minister for clarifying that point.
Does he agree that more could perhaps be done to
incentivise the payment of compensation awards annually
rather than as lump sums, so that the risk of return would
effectively remain with the insurer, which would then pay
out? My understanding is that the legal profession is
keener on lump sums; I believe it is said that lump sums
mean greater fees for lawyers. As a former lawyer, I cannot
believe that any lawyer would be guilty of thinking of
themselves in such an instance, but perhaps we could do
more to encourage a move away from lump sum payments of
compensation.
-
My hon. Friend makes an interesting point. Notwithstanding
the element of fees in the legal profession, I would expect
the insurance and legal professions to sit down and work
that out for themselves. What is insurance for? The point
of it is that it is collective pooled risk in case
something bad happens in our lives. How that is met is for
the insurance companies to work out. We have a competitive
and innovative sector, which I am sure will be listening to
this debate, including to my hon. Friend’s suggestion.
As a Government, we remain determined to address any
knock-on effect on consumers caused by the change, which is
why we will launch a consultation before Easter to review
the framework under which the new rate was set, to ensure
that it remains fit for purpose. My right hon. Friend the
Chancellor of the Exchequer chaired a roundtable late last
month with representatives from the insurance industry to
launch discussion on the consultation.
Colleagues have mentioned the importance of driving
licences in rural areas due to the difficulty of accessing
public transport mechanisms. I recognise that as someone
whose constituency, although not rural, certainly has some
rural parts. We must ensure that other forms of transport
are viable alternatives to motorcars for young people,
particularly in rural areas. It is not easy. We understand
the importance of affordable, accessible transport and
recognise the extra pressures placed on local authorities
throughout the country to provide those services,
particularly as the lower the population density, the
harder it can be for local authorities to do so.
That is why, during the spending review period, my
Department will provide more than £1.5 billion to local
authorities through the integrated transport block, which
will provide capital investment in small transport
improvement projects. It will also provide significant road
maintenance budgets, which relates to the point made by my
hon. Friend the Member for St Albans (Mrs Main). If her
constituency is like mine, she will receive more
correspondence on potholes than on any other transport
issue.
The integrated transport block investment scheme reflects
the Government’s belief that local authorities are best
placed to decide where investment should go in response to
the needs of local communities. It is a local decision to
solve a local problem. There are numerous examples of
Government-funded road transport schemes throughout the
country, such as voluntary car schemes. We have mentioned
the Wheels to Work scheme and how it could help, although
it has its limitations, and we have a £25 million community
minibus fund, to name a few initiatives. Such initiatives
are helping young people to access work, education and so
on. The Government recognise the need for investment in
alternative modes of transport, alongside a commitment to
road safety and to bearing down on car insurance premiums
for young drivers.
To return to some of the questions asked, my hon. Friend
the Member for St Austell and Newquay mentioned the driving
test and how it is evolving. I do not think the question is
about making it harder. He might be interested to know
that, according to the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency,
the first-time pass rate for the 2015-16 financial year was
47.5%. It is not that high. People are not looking at the
driving test and thinking, “Easy; piece of cake.” More
people fail first time than pass. It is a question of
making the driving test more realistic and improving
training before they get to it and after, as we discussed
previously.
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I take the point that the Minister is making. I was saying
not necessarily that I think that the test is too easy, but
that people are coached to pass the test rather than taught
to drive well. He is making a point about the test being
more comprehensive; that is where we need to go.
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My hon. Friend is absolutely right to clarify that he was
not asking for the test to be made easier; that is
absolutely correct.
Colleagues from Northern Ireland, who are no longer in
their place, made contributions. This is an entirely
devolved matter in Northern Ireland, and my
responsibilities do not extend there.
We heard from colleagues about the insurance market and how
benefits can be passed on. It is important that we see all
the signs of a good, thriving, competitive market,
including people shopping around and competition on price
and service. We do see that, but we also see inertia. From
April this year, changes to the Financial Conduct Authority
rules will require insurers to disclose last year’s premium
to the policyholder at the point of renewal, which should
incentivise shopping around. The randomised controlled
trials certainly showed that that prompted up to 18% more
people to switch provider or negotiate a lower premium. It
would be wise for me to consider following that example,
rather than trying to renew on the very last day, as I did
this year, only to find an enormous hike in my premium,
unlike the hon. Member for Berwickshire, Roxburgh and
Selkirk.
The issue of targets has been raised; it is raised
frequently. I have no desire to reintroduce targets. They
can help in other countries, as they have helped in our
past, but the Government’s clear determination to make
progress on road safety is evident in the road safety
statement that we published, the initiative in the autumn
statement to channel funding into the 50 least safe
stretches of road in our country and the changes that we
made to the penalties for mobile phone use, which came into
effect this month. By the way, that is most important; we
know that 60% of people killed or seriously injured in an
incident involving a mobile phone are younger drivers. This
is about cultural change, and we are seeking it with the
penalty change.
I will not consider reintroducing targets. If targets were
the right answer to policy, then policy making would become
remarkably simple, which I do not think it is. Frankly—to
make a political point, which has not been done in this
debate—if targets were the answer to everything, would have left us
a very well-governed country, which I do not think he did.
Policy is a little more complicated than targets.
At the heart of this debate is the potential cap on
insurance premiums. It is a long-standing principle that
insurers set their premiums according to their assessment
of the risks involved, notwithstanding my hon. Friends’
point about gender.
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Mrs Main
I am pleased that my hon. Friend mentioned that. Is there
any opportunity for us to consider the gender directive? If
we are truly interpreting risk, suddenly hiking premiums
for young women seems unfair.
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Not right now, but who knows where the future will take us?
We have some idea, but the detail will still need to be
filled in. Opportunities will certainly arise and that may
well be one of them.
I want us to get to the point where individuals are
assessed according to their risk and where the Government
do all we can to de-risk driving and incentivise safe
driving. Motor insurers use a wide range of criteria to
assess the potential risk associated with a quotation,
including the age and driving experience of the applicant,
the type of vehicle and where it is kept. The level of
premiums is a commercial matter for individual insurers,
because they use their own funds to underwrite the policies
they issue. It is critical that the insurance industry
takes such decisions for itself; the Government should not
seek to control that market. However, I confirm to all who
signed the petition, and to Mr Parker, its originator, that
I am extremely sympathetic to their point. I hope that the
explanations of our actions that I have given demonstrate
our commitment to making progress.
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I realise that the Minister is probably reaching the end of
his speech, but there is one thing that I would like to ask
him. I do not doubt the sincerity of his desire to improve
the situation. Does he see a role for the Government—I
appreciate that it would not be his Department—in
introducing more formal qualifications to the school
curriculum that could help to improve skills and create the
outcome that we all desire?
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It is important to capture people young and to instil road
savviness among younger people. The hon. Member for West
Aberdeenshire and Kincardine (Stuart Blair Donaldson)
mentioned doing his cycling proficiency test at primary
school. That scheme is now called Bikeability—we have
Bikeability Plus, too—and it is thriving. We have protected
its budget throughout this Parliament because it plays a
critical role. The education of younger people in this area
is important in making progress.
We have had a very positive debate. I am grateful to my
hon. Friend the Member for St Austell and Newquay for
introducing it, and to all hon. Members for their
contributions to our stimulating discussion. I recognise
that the cost of car insurance is important to young
people. We are tackling fraudulent whiplash claims and
making our roads safer for all drivers, including younger
drivers. The motor market, including the motor insurance
market, is among the most competitive markets in the UK. I
trust that the insurers themselves have strong incentives
to innovate and to deliver products targeted at younger
drivers at a price that they can afford.
We are not at all complacent about this. We will continue
to look at what we can do to address the cost of car
insurance for younger drivers head on. It is right to
tackle the issue by reducing risk. The Government are doing
what we can to help our younger people to get about and get
on.
6.42 pm
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I thank all hon. Members for their contributions to this very
positive and constructive debate. I again thank Rhys Parker
and all those who signed the petition for bringing the matter
before us today.
Let me summarise by mentioning some highlights of the debate.
I was encouraged to hear a number of hon. Members say that
this is a matter of social mobility and that there is a real
need to help young people to be able to afford to drive,
because of the benefits it brings. I was also very pleased by
the number of Members who highlighted the importance of this
matter in rural areas, because not being able to afford to
drive affects young people in rural areas most severely. We
need insurance companies to treat young people fairly. There
is a case for greater transparency in the premiums charged to
young drivers, and for companies to behave more responsibly.
As the Minister said, what we all want to see is young people
being kept safe on the roads. We want them to be able to
drive and to have access to insurance that they can afford,
but we want that to happen in a way that keeps them safe and
that sees the number of tragic accidents among young people
reduced. I was encouraged by the Minister’s response and I
encourage him to continue to keep the issues, particularly
the driving test, under review. It has been a positive debate
and I thank all Members who contributed.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered e-petition 166847 relating to
the cost of car insurance for young people.
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