The Short and Long Run Effects of Daylight Saving Time on Fatal Automobile Crashes
A BEJEAP Contributions article.
Abstract
Prior literature suggests that Daylight Saving Time (DST) can both increase the risk of automobile crashes in the short run and decrease the risk of automobile crashes in the long run. We use 28 years (1976-2003) of automobile crash data from the United States, and exploit a natural experiment arising from a 1986 federal law that changed the time when states switched to DST to identify the short run and long run effects of DST on automobile crashes. Our findings suggest that (1) DST has no significant detrimental effect on automobile crashes in the short run; (2) DST significantly reduces automobile crashes in the long run with a 8-11% fall in crashes involving pedestrians, and a 6-10% fall in crashes for vehicular occupants in the weeks after the spring shift to DST.Submitted: May 10, 2006 · Accepted: January 17, 2007 · Published: February 8, 2007
Recommended Citation
Sood, Neeraj and Ghosh, Arkadipta
(2007)
"The Short and Long Run Effects of Daylight Saving Time on Fatal Automobile Crashes,"
The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy:
Vol. 7
: Iss. 1
(Contributions), Article 11.
DOI: 10.2202/1935-1682.1618
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/bejeap/vol7/iss1/art11
