Are men or women the better drivers?
AA Insurance checks the facts
It’s an age-old question, debated at bars and dining tables around the country: are men or women better behind the
wheel? AA Insurance has analysed both claims data and how drivers describe their own behaviour, and can report that
while men are certainly more confident in their driving abilities, this isn’t necessarily backed up by what actually
happens on the road.
The 2008 AA Insurance Drivers Index, which surveyed 2,573 New Zealand drivers aged 18-75, reports that 25 percent of men
describe themselves as impatient drivers, compared with 19 percent of women – and three quarters of those surveyed
believe drivers are becoming more aggressive.
“Men are more inclined than women to exhibit a range of risk taking behaviours while on the road,” says Chris Curtin,
CEO, AA Insurance. “Men are more inclined to speed, show aggression, fall asleep behind the wheel and to identify
themselves as impatient.”
A relatively high 15 percent of men admit they exceed the speed limit most of the time, even if only by a few kilometres
per hour, compared with only 9 percent of women. However, the majority of both genders admitted breaking the speed limit
at least some of the time (79 percent of women and 78 percent of men).
Some 25 percent of men have momentarily fallen asleep at the wheel, compared with 13 percent of women. When asked what
they would do if tired when driving, 51 percent of women say they would stop to take a power nap, compared with 46
percent of men.
Some 53 percent of men and 51 percent of women admitted yelling or gesturing at another driver for doing something they
perceived as dangerous or rude. And 17 percent of men admit tailgating after becoming angry with another motorist, and
10 percent of women admitted the same.
However, both genders have firm views about how they should react to aggression on roads such as verbal abuse or hand
gestures: either by signalling an apology and then concentrating on driving (52 percent, both genders) or ignoring the
other driver completely (36 percent, both genders).
Analysis of historical claims data from AA Insurance reveals that on average women make around six percent more claims
than men, but their average cost of claim is lower than men’s.
“Insurance premiums usually take gender into account for these very reasons,” says Chris Curtin, CEO, AA Insurance. “On
average women make more claims than men, but men’s claims are often more expensive than women’s. Men are more likely to
be involved in an accident due to overconfident or risky driving, and women are more likely to have had difficulty
judging distances, but are generally more courteous on the road.”
This pattern of men’s behaviour being more aggressive and more impatient than women when on the road is borne out in the
latest crash statistics from the Ministry of Transport: more men than women are involved in fatal crashes on New Zealand
roads, and more men than women are injured as a result of road accidents. (Source:
www.transport.govt.nz/annual-statistics-2006)
Despite these differences in attitudes and behaviour, men are considerably more confident about their driving abilities
than women: 70 percent of men are confident they could train another person to drive, compared with only 54 percent of
women.
ENDS