NHTSA Report Number DOT HS 809 835 December 2004

Cost Per Life Saved By The Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards

Abstract

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) began to evaluate its Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS) in 1975. By December 2004, NHTSA had evaluated the life-saving benefits as well as the consumer cost for a substantial "core" group of safety technologies for passenger cars and LTVs (pickup trucks, sport utility vehicles and vans).

In 2002, these technologies added an estimated $11,353,000,000 (in 2002 Dollars) to the cost of new cars and LTVs of that model year. They saved an estimated 20,851 lives in the cars and LTVs on the road during that calendar year. That amounts to $544,482 per life saved in 2002.

These technologies added a total of $189,842,000,000 to the consumer cost of new cars and LTVs over model years 1968-2002. They saved 252,989 lives in model year 1968 and later vehicles during calendar years 1968-2002. That amounts to $750,782 (in 2002 Dollars) per life saved in 1968-2002.





Two reports summarize the benefits and costs of the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS).� The first report estimates that the FMVSS and other safety technologies saved 328,551 lives in calendar years 1960-2002, including 24,561 in 2002.� The second report estimates that the FMVSS added $839 (in 2002 Dollars) to the cost of a car in model year 2001 and $711 to the cost of an LTV, smaller amounts in earlier years.� The results of the two reports are not directly comparable, primarily because the first report includes benefits of several voluntary, pre-FMVSS and/or no-cost technologies omitted from the cost study, whereas the second report included the cost of a side-impact standard for passenger cars for which benefits have not yet been evaluated.

Nevertheless, there is a substantial core group of safety technologies attributable to the FMVSS for which both benefits and costs have been estimated, and the cost per life saved can be computed.� The computation is not based on a complex economic analysis, but on a direct comparison of consumer cost and lives saved.� The purpose is to demonstrate, at an order-of-magnitude level, the heuristic cost effectiveness of the FMVSS, not to compute an exact, societal benefit-cost ratio.�

In other words, this analysis does not include any:

Valuation, in Dollars or equivalent fatality units, for the many nonfatal injuries or crash damages avoided by the FMVSS (it strictly compares lives saved to cost).

Discounting or net-present-value calculations, either for costs or for the �value� of lives saved.

Projection of future lives saved by vehicles currently on the road (the FMVSS have already been paid for but the benefits will still accrue for many years until those vehicles are retired).

Value of the lifetime additional fuel consumption due to weight added by the FMVSS.

For example, the cost of the 8 million new cars and 7.9 million new LTVs sold in model year 2002 included $11,353,000,000 for the vehicles to meet the core FMVSS (at $710 per car, excluding the $129 cost of the side impact standard, and $711 per LTV).� During calendar year 2002, the core FMVSS saved 20,851 lives, some in these model year 2002 vehicles, but most in earlier vehicles already on the road before 2002.� Thus, in 2002 the payment per life saved was $544,000.

The core group of technologies cost an estimated $544,000 (in 2002 Dollars) per life saved in 2002, and an average of $751,000 (in 2002 Dollars) per life saved over the longer time period, 1968-2002.� These numbers indicate the FMVSS are, on the whole, highly cost-effective, far below the $3,000,000 per life saved that the Department of Transportation considers acceptable.

Exclusions from the �core� group of safety technologies

The core group of technologies includes all those associated with regulations of greater-than-zero cost, whose benefits and costs have both been evaluated and included in the summary reports, but limited to the model years where benefits and costs are both known.� The core group is most easily defined by describing what is excluded.

The cost report begins with model year 1968, because the initial FMVSS went into effect on January 1, 1968.� Therefore, any benefits in vehicles before model year 1968 are excluded from the core group, even though some of the technologies were implemented before 1968 and their benefits estimated, back to calendar year 1960, in the lives-saved report.

The cost report does not include any technologies introduced on a strictly voluntary basis, even if there is a tenuous subject-matter relationship with one of the FMVSS.� The following voluntary technologies, whose benefits are included in the lives-saved report, are excluded from the core group:

Improvements to mid- and lower instrument panels that were never actually required by FMVSS 201.

Voluntary improvements to belts and other systems that improved performance on the frontal NCAP test.

Structural improvements in 2-door cars that reduced TTI(d) in side impact tests, on a voluntary basis, well before the dynamic test was added to FMVSS 214.

Two FMVSS are excluded because they incorporate technologies that were implemented by the manufacturers well before any regulatory process by NHTSA or other government agencies, and are for that reason considered �no cost� in the summary report on costs:

High-penetration resistant (HPR) windshields, on all vehicles by 1966, subsequently incorporated into FMVSS 205.

Improvements to door locks, generally completed well before 1968, subsequently regulated by FMVSS 206.

Two safety technologies are excluded because they did not result in a cost increase, and possibly even saved money.� In the spirit of the cost report, we will not attribute �credit� for the lives they saved to the associated FMVSS because, at zero or negative cost, these technologies would presumably have been implemented even in the absence of the FMVSS:

Front disc brakes, a technology related to FMVSS 105.

Adhesive windshield bonding, a technology related to FMVSS 212.

Two technologies are excluded because they do not add anything to the consumer cost of a new car or LTV:

Conspicuity tape for heavy trailers (FMVSS 108): car and LTV occupants benefit from not hitting the trailers, but the cost accrues on the trailers.

Child safety seats (FMVSS 213): they must be purchased separately and are not part of the cost of a new car or LTV.

In addition, we will limit benefits to those that accrue directly to car and LTV occupants, and not include the pedestrian, bicyclist and motorcyclist lives saved by dual master cylinders on cars and LTVs.

Finally, two recent technologies are excluded because they have not been fully evaluated:

The dynamic side-impact test requirement of FMVSS 214: cost studies have been completed, but the estimation of benefits is still underway.

3-point belts for rear-center occupants: benefits are included in the lives-saved report, but cost has not yet been estimated.

The �core� group of safety technologies

Despite these exclusions, a large core group of technologies remains that can be associated with specific FMVSS, and for which both costs and benefits have been estimated starting in model year 1968 or later.� The following technologies significantly reduced fatalities while adding cost to new cars and/or LTVs:

Dual master cylinders (FMVSS 105)

Energy-absorbing steering assemblies (FMVSS 203/204)

Every type of safety belt at any seat position (FMVSS 208), except 3-point belts for rear-center occupants. � Although it is true that lap belts were widely introduced before 1968, much of the impetus came from State laws or regulations. � These State laws may be considered Government actions that are �predecessors� of the FMVSS. � (But only the costs and benefits from 1968 onward will be included in the core group.) �� Of course, the FMVSS have played a direct role in many of the improvements to belt systems after 1968 that increased their effectiveness, use and consumer acceptance.

Although it is true that lap belts were widely introduced before 1968, much of the impetus came from State laws or regulations. These State laws may be considered Government actions that are �predecessors� of the FMVSS. (But only the costs and benefits from 1968 onward will be included in the core group.) Of course, the FMVSS have played a direct role in many of the improvements to belt systems after 1968 that increased their effectiveness, use and consumer acceptance. Frontal air bags (FMVSS 208) and on-off switches for passenger air bags in pickup trucks.

Side door beams, regulated by the static test requirement of FMVSS 214.

Roof crush strength, passenger cars (FMVSS 216).

In addition, the following technologies were evaluated for cost and benefit.� They added to the cost of a new vehicle, and although there was not a statistically significant reduction of fatalities, there were significant benefits of reducing injuries or avoiding crashes:

Side marker lamps (FMVSS 108)

Center High Mounted Stop Lamps (FMVSS 108)

Head restraints (FMVSS 202)

Fuel system integrity (FMVSS 301)

One technology added cost, but the statistical evaluation did not identify any significant benefit:

Seat back locks in 2-door passenger cars (FMVSS 207)

Finally, four technologies were found to add cost.� No evaluations of benefit have been performed, but none are planned because there is little hope of finding a statistically significant effect in the limited crash data that would be relevant to the analysis.� We will assume, conservatively, zero lives saved for these technologies:

Windshield washers, and upgraded wipers, for LTVs (FMVSS 104)

Safety devices for power windows (FMVSS 118)

Accelerator-pedal return systems (FMVSS 124)

Seatback padding to provide head impact protection for rear-seat occupants (FMVSS 201)

In other words, the core group comprises all technologies included in the Executive Summary and summary tables of the cost report except those related to the dynamic test requirements of FMVSS 214 in passenger cars (whose benefits have not been evaluated).

Consumer cost vs. lives saved

Table 1 computes the annual and cumulative consumer cost of the core group of FMVSS for passenger cars, in model years 1968-2002, in 2002 Dollars.� The first column of Table 1 indicates new-car sales by model year.� It is based on Polk NVPP registrations, for that model year, as of July 1 of the next calendar year.� New car sales have been in the 7-11 million range annually.

TABLE 1 � PASSENGER CARS: COST OF THE FMVSS, MODEL YEARS 1968-2002

(in 2002 Dollars)

FMVSS Cost per Car Model Year New Car Sales All Excluded Core Cost of the Core FMVSS 1968 � 8,742,568 $169.24 �$ 0.00 $169.24 �� $1,480,000,000 1969 � 9,106,883 �216.05 �� 0.00 �216.05 �� $1,968,000,000 1970 � 8,704,374 �236.02 �� 0.00 �236.02 �� $2,054,000,000 1971 � 8,730,816 �241.47 �� 0.00 �241.47 �� $2,108,000,000 1972 � 9,948,136 �268.24 �� 0.00 �268.24 �� $2,668,000,000 1973 �11,036,182 �291.23 �� 0.00 �291.23 �� $3,214,000,000 1974 � 9,649,885 �301.97 �� 0.00 �301.97 �� $2,914,000,000 1975 � 7,611,961 �299.54 �� 0.00 �299.54 �� $2,280,000,000 1976 � 9,452,325 �312.58 �� 0.00 �312.58 �� $2,955,000,000 1977 �10,267,394 �306.66 �� 0.00 �306.66 �� $3,149,000,000 1978 �10,573,362 �302.85 �� 0.00 �302.85 �� $3,202,000,000 1979 �10,277,491 �299.58 �� 0.00 �299.58 �� $3,079,000,000 1980 � 8,707,110 �298.26 �� 0.00 �298.26 �� $2,597,000,000 1981 � 8,127,671 �297.87 �� 0.00 �297.87 �� $2,421,000,000 1982 � 7,303,353 �297.25 �� 0.00 �297.25 �� $2,171,000,000 1983 � 7,657,122 �297.61 �� 0.00 �297.61 �� $2,279,000,000 1984 �10,407,770 �297.66 �� 0.00 �297.66 �� $3,098,000,000 1985 �10,531,723 �298.29 �� 0.00 �298.29 �� $3,142,000,000 1986 �10,694,040 �299.50 �� 0.00 �299.50 �� $3,203,000,000 1987 �10,380,058 �338.32 �� 0.00 �338.32 �� $3,512,000,000 1988 �10,303,489 �380.42 �� 0.00 �380.42 �� $3,920,000,000 1989 � 9,728,781 �421.31 �� 0.00 �421.31 �� $4,099,000,000 1990 � 8,695,605 �596.71 �� 0.00 �596.71 �� $5,189,000,000 1991 � 8,100,316 �593.10 �� 0.00 �593.10 �� $4,804,000,000 1992 ��7,739,082 �607.59 �� 0.00 �607.59 �� $4,702,000,000 1993 � 8,201,002 �650.01 �� 0.00 �650.01 �� $5,331,000,000 1994 � 8,150,339 �752.09 � 12.71 �739.38 �� $6,026,000,000 1995 � 9,178,951 �777.93 � 31.94 �745.99 �� $6,847,000,000 1996 � 7,695,487 �782.84 � 51.38 �731.46 �� $5,629,000,000 1997 � 8,049,242 �838.81 �128.94 �709.87 �� $5,714,000,000 1998 � 7,714,249 �839.18 �129.44 �709.74 �� $5,475,000,000 1999 � 8,177,224 �839.16 �129.41 �709.75 �� $5,804,000,000 2000 � 8,882,145 �839.29 �129.58 �709.71 �� $6,304,000,000 2001 � 8,092,939 �839.13 �129.35 �709.78 �� $5,744,000,000 2002 � 8,053,834 �839.13 �129.35 �709.78 �� $5,716,000,000 314,672,909 �$134,798,000,000





The next column, the cost of all FMVSS per passenger car, is copied from the cost report.� Excluding the cost of the dynamic requirement for FMVSS 214 that phased in during 1994-97, the cost of the core FMVSS increased from $169 in 1968 to almost $710 in 1997-2002.� The total consumer cost of the FMVSS in passenger cars increased from $1,480,000,000 in 1968 to $5,716,000,000 in model year 2002.� It amounted to $134,798,000,000 in model years 1968-2002.

Table 2 estimates the lives of passenger car occupants saved by the core group of FMVSS.� The first column of Table 2, copied from Table 2-4 of the lives-saved report, estimates that 232,255 lives were saved in calendar years 1960-2002 by all of the safety technologies considered in that report, in cars of any model year.� Two steps reduce those numbers to the benefits of just the core FMVSS.� The middle column shows lives saved by all of the technologies, but only in cars of model year 1968 and later.� The same model as in Part 2 of the lives-saved report, but with the data limited to model year 1968 and later, generates those estimates.� In the early years, a substantial proportion of the lives saved are in pre-1968 cars, but by the 1980's the first two columns are quite similar, because most of the pre-1968 cars have been retired.� The lives saved by the core group of FMVSS, shown in the last column, is obtained by deducting that model's estimates for the voluntary, pre-FMVSS, no-cost and other safety technologies excluded from the core group.� In 2002, 11,851 of the total 14,175 lives saved are included in the core group of FMVSS; altogether, 176,614 of 232,255 lives saved are in the core group.

Tables 3 and 4 compute the costs and benefits of the core FMVSS in LTVs.� The first column of Table 3 indicates that new-LTV sales increased from 1.5 million in 1968 to nearly 8 million in 2002.� All of the LTV FMVSS in the cost report are included in the core group; the cost of the core FMVSS per LTV is copied from the cost report.� The consumer cost of the FMVSS in LTVs increased from $158,000,000 in 1968 to $5,637,000,000 in model year 2002, adding up to $55,044,000,000 in model years 1968-2002.

The first column of Table 4, copied from Table 2-4 of the lives-saved report, estimates that 94,117 lives were saved in LTVs during calendar years 1960-2002 by all of the safety technologies in all model years.� When the analysis is limited to LTVs of model years 1968+, the estimate drops to 93,296.� The core group of FMVSS saved 76,245 of these lives in 1968-2002.� In 2002 alone, 9,000 of the total 10,331 lives saved are included in the core group.





TABLE 2 � PASSENGER CARS: LIVES SAVED BY SAFETY TECHNOLOGIES, CALENDAR YEARS 1960-2002

Calendar Year All All (MY 68+) Core FMVSS 1960 ����� 92 ������� 0 �������� 0 1961 ����� 95 ������� 0 �������� 0 1962 ���� 110 ������� 0 �������� 0 1963 ���� 131 ������� 0 �������� 0 1964 ���� 168 ������� 0 �������� 0 1965 ���� 211 ������� 0 �������� 0 1966 ���� 288 ������� 0 �������� 0 1967 ���� 444 ������� 0 �������� 0 1968 ���� 719 ����� 252 ������ 169 1969 �� 1,042 ����� 586 ������ 395 1970 �� 1,279 ����� 867 ������ 585 1971 �� 1,574 ��� 1,180 ������ 793 1972 �� 1,984 ��� 1,591 ���� 1,073 1973 �� 2,282 ��� 1,921 ���� 1,303 1974 �� 2,220 ��� 1,958 ���� 1,356 1975 �� 2,723 ��� 2,492 ���� 1,786 1976 �� 2,852 ��� 2,659 ���� 1,880 1977 �� 3,190 ��� 3,015 ���� 2,065 1978 �� 3,501 ��� 3,360 ���� 2,285 1979 �� 3,657 ��� 3,546 ���� 2,337 1980 �� 3,848 ��� 3,764 ���� 2,445 1981 �� 3,758 ��� 3,697 ���� 2,374 1982 �� 3,394 ��� 3,337 ���� 2,173 1983 �� 3,534 ��� 3,494 ���� 2,286 1984 �� 3,943 ��� 3,909 ���� 2,634 1985 �� 5,196 ��� 5,160 ���� 3,767 1986 �� 6,827 ��� 6,786 ���� 5,167 1987 �� 7,783 ��� 7,751 ���� 5,975 1988 �� 8,733 ��� 8,702 ���� 6,759 1989 �� 8,677 ��� 8,652 ���� 6,763 1990 �� 8,684 ��� 8,666 ���� 6,789 1991 �� 8,943 ��� 8,926 ���� 7,074 1992 �� 9,007 ��� 8,994 ���� 7,146 1993 �� 9,916 ��� 9,903 ���� 7,982 1994 � 10,626 �� 10,612 ���� 8,578 1995 � 11,115 �� 11,108 ���� 8,957 1996 � 12,076 �� 12,068 ���� 9,785 1997 � 12,146 �� 12,138 ���� 9,866 1998 � 12,325 �� 12,319 ��� 10,128 1999 � 12,401 �� 12,393 ��� 10,140 2000 � 13,052 �� 13,044 ��� 10,689 2001 � 13,532 �� 13,526 ��� 11,258 2002 � 14,175 �� 14,168 ��� 11,851 �232,255 226,543 �� 176,614

TABLE 3 � LTVs: COST OF THE FMVSS, MODEL YEARS 1968-2002(in 2002 Dollars)

Calendar Year New LTV Sales Core (All) FMVSS Cost Per LTV Cost Of The Core FMVSS 1968 � 1,483,642 $106.58 ����� $158,000,000 1969 � 1,765,168 �106.64 ����� $188,000,000 1970 � 1,629,097 �115.95 ����� $189,000,000 1971 � 1,674,141 �116.24 ����� $195,000,000 1972 � 2,238,132 �142.26 ����� $318,000,000 1973 � 2,654,790 �154.61 ����� $410,000,000 1974 � 2,573,930 �160.79 ����� $414,000,000 1975 � 2,012,141 �160.87 ����� $324,000,000 1976 � 2,688,814 �162.27 ����� $436,000,000 1977 � 3,170,915 �173.14 ����� $549,000,000 1978 � 3,463,941 �189.14 ����� $655,000,000 1979 � 3,701,137 �191.06 ����� $707,000,000 1980 � 2,167,721 �195.96 ����� $425,000,000 1981 � 1,861,330 �196.63 ����� $366,000,000 1982 � 1,996,118 �206.92 ����� $413,000,000 1983 � 2,339,221 �212.12 ����� $496,000,000 1984 � 3,557,322 �214.28 ����� $762,000,000 1985 � 3,943,446 �216.33 ����� $853,000,000 1986 � 4,488,215 �216.81 ����� $973,000,000 1987 � 4,162,249 �233.52 ����� $972,000,000 1988 � 4,598,016 �232.58 ���� $1,069,000,000 1989 � 4,525,434 �232.42 ���� $1,052,000,000 1990 � 3,869,770 �236.15 ����� $914,000,000 1991 � 3,977,269 �250.26 ����� $995,000,000 1992 � 4,077,077 �294.29 ���� $1,200,000,000 1993 � 4,861,491 �308.55 ���� $1,500,000,000 1994 � 5,677,239 �389.49 ���� $2,211,000,000 1995 � 5,934,273 �547.71 ���� $3,250,000,000 1996 � 5,407,762 �612.52 ���� $3,312,000,000 1997 � 6,125,244 �658.58 ���� $4,034,000,000 1998 � 6,331,463 �705.27 ���� $4,465,000,000 1999 � 7,189,531 �708.22 ���� $5,092,000,000 2000 � 7,410,544 �709.39 ���� $5,257,000,000 2001 � 7,389,764 �710.86 ���� $5,253,000,000 2002 � 7,929,365 �710.86 ���� $5,637,000,000 138,875,712 $55,044,000,000

TABLE 4 � LTVs: LIVES SAVED BY SAFETY TECHNOLOGIES, CALENDAR YEARS 1960-2002

Lives Saved By Safety Technologies Calendar Year All All (MY 68+) Core FMVSS 1960 ��� 22 ������ 0 ������ 0 1961 ��� 22 ������ 0 ������ 0 1962 ��� 25 ������ 0 ������ 0 1963 ��� 28 ������ 0 ������ 0 1964 ��� 34 ������ 0 ������ 0 1965 ��� 38 ������ 0 ������ 0 1966 ��� 46 ������ 0 ������ 0 1967 ��� 55 ������ 0 ������ 0 1968 ��� 80 ����� 22 ����� 16 1969 �� 114 ����� 60 ����� 43 1970 �� 136 ����� 92 ����� 63 1971 �� 161 ���� 124 ����� 81 1972 �� 194 ���� 161 ���� 100 1973 �� 238 ���� 208 ���� 128 1974 �� 244 ���� 222 ���� 138 1975 �� 272 ���� 251 ���� 162 1976 �� 324 ���� 306 ���� 188 1977 �� 409 ���� 395 ���� 238 1978 �� 462 ���� 448 ���� 260 1979 �� 561 ���� 549 ���� 304 1980 �� 608 ���� 596 ���� 300 1981 �� 614 ���� 602 ���� 318 1982 � �585 ���� 576 ���� 304 1983 �� 641 ���� 635 ���� 353 1984 �� 815 ���� 804 ���� 483 1985 �1,118 �� 1,107 ���� 749 1986 �1,620 �� 1,606 �� 1,174 1987 �2,115 �� 2,105 �� 1,576 1988 �2,457 �� 2,439 �� 1,865 1989 �2,741 �� 2,733 �� 2,132 1990 �2,957 �� 2,948 �� 2,317 1991 �3,188 �� 3,180 �� 2,530 1992 �3,417 �� 3,408 �� 2,763 1993 �3,818 �� 3,813 �� 3,139 1994 �4,469 �� 4,462 �� 3,698 1995 �4,942 �� 4,931 �� 4,096 1996 �5,679 �� 5,673 �� 4,754 1997 �6,356 �� 6,350 �� 5,362 1998 �6,998 �� 6,988 � �5,938 1999 �7,486 �� 7,480 �� 6,365 2000 �8,682 �� 8,676 �� 7,479 2001 �9,016 �� 9,012 �� 7,830 2002 10,331 � 10,330 �� 9,000 94,117 93,296 76,245

Finally, Table 5 compares the consumer cost and lives saved by the core group of FMVSS for cars and LTVs, combined.� Adding the right columns of Tables 1 and 3, the first column of Table 5 shows the core FMVSS added a total of $189,842,000,000 to the consumer cost of new cars and LTVs in model years 1968-2002.� They saved 252,989 lives in model year 1968+ cars during calendar years 1968-2002 (sum of 176,614 from Table 2 and 76,245 from Table 4).� That averages out to a cost of $750,782 per life saved in 1968-2002.

In 2002 alone, the core FMVSS added $11,353,000,000 to the cost of new cars and LTVs of that model year.� They saved 20,851 lives in the cars and LTVs on the road during that calendar year.� They cost $544,482 per life saved.� The cost per life saved generally decreased from year to year during 1968-2002, primarily because belt use increased: the more people buckle up, the more benefit the public will obtain from equipment they have already paid for whether they use it or not.





TABLE 5 � CONSUMER COST AND LIVES SAVED BY THE CORE FMVSS, CARS + LTVs, 1968-2002 (in 2002 Dollars)

Year Cost Of The Core FMVSS Lives Saved 1968 �� $1,638,000,000 ����� 185 1969 �� $2,156,000,000 ����� 438 1970 �� $2,243,000,000 ����� 648 1971 �� $2,303,000,000 ����� 874 1972 �� $2,986,000,000 ��� 1,173 1973 �� $3,624,000,000 ��� 1,431 1974 �� $3,328,000,000 ��� 1,494 1975 �� $2,604,000,000 ��� 1,948 1976 �� $3,391,000,000 ��� 2,068 1977 �� $3,698,000,000 ��� 2,303 1978 �� $3,857,000,000 ��� 2,545 1979 �� $3,786,000,000 ��� 2,641 1980 �� $3,022,000,000 ��� 2,745 1981 �� $2,787,000,000 ��� 2,692 1982 �� $2,584,000,000 ��� 2,477 1983 �� $2,775,000,000 ��� 2,639 1984 �� $3,860,000,000 ��� 3,117 1985 �� $3,995,000,000 ��� 4,516 1986 �� $4,176,000,000 ��� 6,341 1987 �� $4,484,000,000 ��� 7,551 1988 �� $4,989,000,000 ��� 8,624 1989 �� $5,151,000,000 ��� 8,895 1990 �� $6,103,000,000 ��� 9,106 1991 �� $5,799,000,000 ��� 9,604 1992 �� $5,902,000,000 ��� 9,909 1993 �� $6,831,000,000 �� 11,121 1994 �� $8,237,000,000 �� 12,276 1995 � $10,097,000,000 �� 13,053 1996 �� $8,941,000,000 �� 14,539 1997 �� $9,748,000,000 �� 15,228 1998 �� $9,940,000,000 �� 16,066 1999 � $10,896,000,000 �� 16,505 2000 � $11,561,000,000 �� 18,168 2001 � $10,997,000,000 �� 19,088 2002 � $11,353,000,000 �� 20,851 $544,482 per life saved in 2002 $189,842,000,000 252,859 $750,782 per life saved in 1968-2002



