Effects of a driver cellphone ban on overall, handheld, and hands-free cellphone use while driving: New evidence from Canada
Authors: Christopher S. Carpenter and Hai V. Nguyen
Overview
Abstract (English)
We provide new evidence on the effects of increasingly common driver cellphone bans on self-reported overall, handheld, and hands-free cellphone use while driving by studying Ontario, Canada, which instituted a 3-month education campaign in November 2009 followed by a binding driver cellphone ban in February 2010. Using residents of Alberta as a control group in a difference-in-differences framework, we find visual and regression-based evidence that Ontario’s cellphone ban significantly reduced overall and handheld cellphone use. We also find that the policies significantly increased hands-free cellphone use. The reductions in overall and handheld use are driven exclusively by women, whereas the increases in hands-free use are much larger for men. Our results provide the first direct evidence that cellphone bans have the unintended effect of inducing substitution to hands-free devices.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Christopher S. Carpenter and Hai V. Nguyen |
Publication Year | 2015 |
Title | Effects of a driver cellphone ban on overall, handheld, and hands-free cellphone use while driving: New evidence from Canada |
Volume | 24 |
Journal Name | Health Economics |
Number | 11 |
Pages | 1452-1467 |
Publication Language | English |
- Christopher S. Carpenter
- Christopher S. Carpenter and Hai V. Nguyen
- Effects of a driver cellphone ban on overall, handheld, and hands-free cellphone use while driving: New evidence from Canada
- Health Economics
- 24
- 2015
- 11
- 1452-1467