PeteC wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 2:18 pm
Quite honestly, that site is a mess. Broken links, data missing, code shown instead of content.
Regardless, searching through it I could find no pathway to a previous day's numbers.
I think that's why I was finding it interesting, but frustrating at the same time. I was hoping to get to this link, which is very similar https://www.thairsc.com/
It does state: "Data source : Traffic Accident Data collected from claims filed under Protection for Motor Vehicle Victmes Act. From RVP Company Limited in every province around Thailand."
So we can conclude, I think, that as we suspected their numbers are from insurance data.
I guess if the 'official' numbers during the 7 deadly periods come from insurance stats, if we take into account the number of people not insured in Thailand, it accounts for the low numbers.
Big Boy wrote:I guess if the 'official' numbers during the 7 deadly periods come from insurance stats, if we take into account the number of people not insured in Thailand, it accounts for the low numbers.
I would be the RSC numbers using insurance figures.
Big Boy wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 7:58 pm
RSC numbers are the figures used all year round, so are you therefore saying they are grossly overstated, and Thailand is actually a driving paradise?
We all know it isn't. Spending fifteen minutes driving/riding on any highway here will confirm the fact that it is one of the most dangerous countries in the world to drive in. Watch the "accident hour" on Thai news every day and that'll also reinforce the premise.
Its pretty obvious what is happening here, the junta is manipulating the stats (as they do with covid and tourism) to make themselves look better - an "election" is approaching after all. Absolutely nothing has been done to improve road safety or reduce the shocking road fatality figures over the past few years so there is no reason for fatalities to drop by two-thirds almost overnight.
All stats here are bullshit, which is why it is not a good idea to pay too much heed to them.
Who is the happier man, he who has braved the storm of life and lived or he who has stayed securely on shore and merely existed? - Hunter S Thompson
Big Boy wrote:RSC numbers are the figures used all year round, so are you therefore saying they are grossly overstated, and Thailand is actually a driving paradise?
No. I'm saying I tend to trust the RSC figures more than the government's 7 deadly days figures because the RSC uses information from the insurance companies. Whereas the government sets a target which its minions are likely to try and match.
HHTel wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 2:48 pm
I think that's the same for all road deaths. Only those that die on the spot and those that die later are never included.
I wonder what that would do to the annual figures.
My thinking at the moment is that the Thai RSC site may include those who die later given that they use insurance company data to arrive at their numbers. Just a thought.
Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. Source