Publication | Closed Access
Advantageous Selection in Insurance Markets
357
Citations
16
References
2001
Year
Game TheoryAsymmetric InformationAdvantageous SelectionMarket DesignPortfolio ChoiceInsufficient Insurance ProvisionRisk ManagementManagementInsurance RegulationsMechanism DesignInsuranceEconomicsInformation AsymmetryImperfect Information GameFinanceInsurance MarketsInsurance LawInformation EconomicsBusinessGame-theoretic ProbabilityIntertemporal Portfolio ChoiceInsurance FraudInsurance Market
This article reverses the standard conclusion that asymmetric information plus competition results in insufficient insurance provision. Risk-tolerant individuals take few precautions and are disinclined to insure, but they are drawn into a pooling equilibrium by the low premiums created by the presence of safer, more risk-averse types. Taxing insurance drives out the reckless clients, allowing a strict Pareto gain. This result depends on administrative costs in processing claims and issuing policies, as does the novel finding of a pure-strategy, partial-pooling, subgame-perfect Nash equilibrium in the insurance market. Copyright 2001 by the RAND Corporation.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1