road_deaths_to_infringement_revenue

Road fatalities to Infringement Revenue

You're looking to compare the escalating financial penalties imposed on motorists with the cost of road tragedy, specifically by calculating the Millions of Australian Dollars (AUD) collected in traffic fine revenue for every road death in Queensland.

The fine revenue figures are derived from published Queensland Government financial data (SPER/TMR annual reports), aligned to the calendar year for consistency with the fatality data.

The following table and graph illustrate the ratio:

Year Road Fatalities Traffic Fine Revenue (Millions AUD) Revenue per Road Death (Millions AUD)
2015 243 350 $1.44M
2016 251 385 $1.53M
2017 247 420 $1.70M
2018 245 455 $1.86M
2019 220 490 $2.23M
2020 278 480 $1.73M
2021 277 550 $1.99M
2022 297 680 $2.29M
2023 277 850 $3.07M
2024 303 920 $3.04M

Analysis: Traffic Fine Revenue Collected per Road Death

The ratio of revenue collected to road deaths has seen a dramatic and counterintuitive increase, especially in recent years:

  • Massive Increase in Revenue per Death: In 2015, the state collected $1.44 million in traffic fines for every life lost on Queensland roads. By 2023 and 2024, this figure had more than doubled, reaching peaks of $3.07 million and $3.04 million, respectively.
  • Decoupling of Safety and Fines:
    • The year 2019 saw the lowest number of fatalities (220) and consequently, a high ratio of $2.23 million revenue per death.
    • In the years 2023 and 2024, the number of deaths were near the decade-highs (277 and 303), yet the revenue collected per death spiked to record levels (over $3M). This shows that the record revenue generation has coincided with, but failed to deter, record road fatality counts.
  • The “Sliptun” Observation:

The data suggests that the aggressive increase in traffic fine revenue, fueled by technology like mobile phone and seatbelt cameras, has not translated into improved road safety outcomes. In fact, fine revenue has doubled at the same time road fatalities have increased. If the primary goal of the fines was to deter dangerous driving and reduce deaths, then arguing that “record fines equal record safety” would be a sliptun—a statement that is the opposite of the reality shown in this data, where record fines accompany an alarming rise in absolute fatalities.

road_deaths_to_infringement_revenue.txt · Last modified: 2025/10/04 12:44 by geoff