The typical car is on the road 1% of the time. The typical driver-less car will be on the road whenever possible, so will see 100x usage. Just 1% of cars being driver-less will therefore double cars on the road. That will go to things that are good - taking the kids to soccer practice, go to things that are neutral - sleeping in the car as it drives to the beach, and it will go to things that are wasteful, like shipping a single package to a single customer and then going back to the store. But traffic congestion scales exponentially, and cars don't scale at all. So in reality, the entirety of the city will be a traffic jam and you won't be able to get anywhere. Just as we've seen buying GPU's during the crypto shortage, the bots will win, your time can't compete with automation.<p>So in reality in a world that has driver-less cars, the first thing we will see is a congestion tax. And the first thing we would like to see as a result of that congestion tax is better public transportation. Driver-less buses will do well, especially if they have dedicated lanes. Trains will do better. If you think that you can avoid public spending on public transportation because driver-less cars will save you, you are mistaken. You should be funding that such that if driver-less cars become a reality, but even if they don't, you will be ready.