I'd say it goes beyond that, consider Germany, to obtain a drivers licence there, you need to complete the following:
- An 8hr First Aid course
- An Eye-exam
- Road-rules general knowledge test
- Written Theory exam
- Minimum number of practical driving lessons including Autobahn, Urban, Rural and Nighttime
I was under the impression that a basic mechanics course was also required, but not sure on this..
Yet in Australia we essentially ask multiple choice questions and need to perform a three-point turn.
Well in Australia - or QLD rather - you now have to keep a logbook as a learner and this needs to fill a minimum number of hours before you can sit the practical test for your provisional licence.
The problem is that the logbook records are very easily forged.
The main one missing is the first aid course. I can't imagine that being popular here. The first aid requirement for some professions is actually being removed.
Frankly if they taught people to drive rather than pass the test we would all be better off. The best driver training I ever had was when I got my HR licence and had to be able to demonstrate I could drive the vehicle safely in heavy traffic.
But this is the problem. People are simply trying to pass the test. They know that once the test is passed and they have a licence, unless they are willfully reckless they will never lose it. No one will ever test them again. So there.
If retesting was required, say, every 3 years, that might be a different story. But then people would not like that at all. I can't think of a jurisdiction which has such a requirement.
Also, testing approves your ability to drive on the assumptions that either (a) everyone is as good a driver as when they passed the test (or as good as you, depending on how well you passed), and/or (b) the road is empty. Neither are completely reasonable assumptions.
I think they have a very rigorous system, which then allows the speeds they drive on the Autobahns.
The rigorous system, IMO, is more bred from a long standing proud tradition of motoring and to avoid a lot of conflicts thereof.
The speeds you can drive on the Autobahn, I would say, has little to do with the system you describe. Long stretches of Autobahn which are practical enough to drive at top speed is simply a matter of liberal practicality; in practice, there are many parts of the Autobahn which have posted speed limits, and only few areas which have unrestricted limits. The entire Autobahn system is not speed limit free. Many vehicles in Germany are deliberately manufactured and sold with speed limitations.
You could probably tear down the highway at 200 km/h in Australia too - as long as hardly anyone is around; the road is fairly flat, long and in good condition; and you don't get caught.
Driving offences, as I might be lead to believe, attract stricter penalties in Germany than they do in Australia.
Don't get me started on the AU system where someone taught bad habits by their parents can pass them on to their children.
My dad reckons shoulder checks (i.e. looking briefly over your shoulder when changing lanes to check the blind spot, or that is the idea) are an idiotic idea - mirrors should do the lot and it unnecessarily distracts the driver who should always be focussed on the road ahead.
He also taught me, however, that it is better to be wrong and alive than to be correct and dead. I guess that applies for road rage incidents, too. He grew up driving in Manila, however, which has a much more survivalist and cutthroat approach to driving.