Considerable evidence suggests that many people for whom insurance is worth purchasing do not have coverage and others who appear not to need financial protection against certain events actually have purchased coverage. There are certain types of events for which one might expect to see insurance widely marketed that are viewed today by insurers as uninsurable and there are other polices one might not expect to be successfully marketed that exist on a relatively large scale. In addition, evidence suggests that cost-effective preventive measures are sometimes not rewarded by insurers in ways that could change their clients\u27 behavior. These examples reveal that insurance purchasing and marketing activities do not always produce results tha...
studying insurance decisions under laboratory conditions, subjects showed a clear and repeated prefe...
Willardsen presented on his upcoming article with the same title. The abstract from this paper is a...
Two related trends have created novel challenges for managing risk in the United States. The first t...
It is easy for a consumer to make mistakes in insurance markets, especially when deciding whether to...
In three essays, consumers’ insurance decision making is studied in the context of product warranty....
This paper tests whether the use of endogenous risk categorization by insurers enables consumers to ...
Despite evidence that many consumers in health insurance markets are subject to information friction...
textabstractIn recent years, it has become increasingly clear that Expected Utility Theory (EUT) is ...
Numerous studies have shown that consumers react imperfectly to changes in health insurance coverage...
Standard theories of insurance, dating from Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976), stress the role of adver...
Because choosing insurance requires consumers to assess risks and probabilities, the demand for insu...
Government intervention in insurance markets is ubiquitous and the theoretical basis for such interv...
Persistently high profits on “insurance” for small value losses sold as an add-on to other products ...
This paper develops and implements a general framework to study insurance market equilibrium and eva...
This dissertation addresses the issues of adverse selection in the health insurance market. The lite...
studying insurance decisions under laboratory conditions, subjects showed a clear and repeated prefe...
Willardsen presented on his upcoming article with the same title. The abstract from this paper is a...
Two related trends have created novel challenges for managing risk in the United States. The first t...
It is easy for a consumer to make mistakes in insurance markets, especially when deciding whether to...
In three essays, consumers’ insurance decision making is studied in the context of product warranty....
This paper tests whether the use of endogenous risk categorization by insurers enables consumers to ...
Despite evidence that many consumers in health insurance markets are subject to information friction...
textabstractIn recent years, it has become increasingly clear that Expected Utility Theory (EUT) is ...
Numerous studies have shown that consumers react imperfectly to changes in health insurance coverage...
Standard theories of insurance, dating from Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976), stress the role of adver...
Because choosing insurance requires consumers to assess risks and probabilities, the demand for insu...
Government intervention in insurance markets is ubiquitous and the theoretical basis for such interv...
Persistently high profits on “insurance” for small value losses sold as an add-on to other products ...
This paper develops and implements a general framework to study insurance market equilibrium and eva...
This dissertation addresses the issues of adverse selection in the health insurance market. The lite...
studying insurance decisions under laboratory conditions, subjects showed a clear and repeated prefe...
Willardsen presented on his upcoming article with the same title. The abstract from this paper is a...
Two related trends have created novel challenges for managing risk in the United States. The first t...