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Uber and Traffic Fatalities

Michael Anderson; Lucas W. Davis

University of California

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2026

Abstract Previous studies of the effect of ridesharing on traffic fatalities have yielded inconsistent conclusions. We revisit this question using proprietary data from Uber measuring monthly rideshare activity at the Census tract level. We find a consistent negative effect of ridesharing on traffic fatalities, with impacts concentrated during nights and weekends. Our results imply that ridesharing has decreased U.S. traffic fatalities by 5.2% in areas where it operates. The annual life-saving benefits are $6.8 billion. Back-of-the-envelope calculations suggest that these benefits are of similar magnitude to producer surplus captured by Uber shareholders or consumer surplus captured by Uber riders.

DOI
10.1162/rest_a_01385
Volume
108 (2)
Pages
525-532
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
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