Restricted licences should be just that - cars with serious power-to-weight ratios should be banned until driving ability has been tested.
I'm not talking about basic driving tests here, either. Any monkey can do a parallel park and check their mirrors a couple of times, often in mummy's gutless auto shopping basket.
The following week they're in a 300kW rice rocket that they've got no real handle on and think they're capable of outrunning police, who have had significant training in driving at high speeds. The cops have got a job to do, and it's with the knowledge that if something goes wrong, they're likely to be facing some sort of inquiry and, if they've put so much as a foot wrong, disciplinary action.
Systems like MyKey, as fitted to the Fiesta ST on the cover, allow parents to set parameters for their teens' on-road activities like top speed and even maximum volume. One day every car will have these sorts of features.
But for the moment, the clever move by our pals in Parliament would be to limit power for youth drivers until they've completed an advanced driving course. There's no substitute for experience, but a bit of useful information can go a long way.
Do you have a better plan? Let us know by commenting on this article below.