We analyse a 2-period competitive insurance market which is characterized by the simultaneous presence of standard moral hazard and adverse selection with regard to consumer time preferences. It is shown that there exists an equilibrium in which patient consumers use high effort and buy a profit-making insurance contract with high coverage, whereas impatient consumers use low effort and buy a contract with low coverage or even remain uninsured. This finding may help to explain why positive profits and the opposite of adverse selection with regard to risk types can sometimes be observed empirically. JEL Classification: D82, G2
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously influential among scholars,...
Advantageous selection occurs when the agents most eager to buy insurance are also the cheapest one...
In the classic Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976) model of insurance under adverse selection, it is ass...
Human behavior, rational or irrational one, influences one of the most complex markets worldwide: th...
Human behavior, rational or irrational one, influences one of the most complex markets worldwide: th...
In this survey we present some of the more significant results in the literature on adverse selectio...
We examine insurance markets in which there are two types of customers: those who regret suboptimal ...
We examine insurance markets in which there are two types of customers: those who regret suboptimal ...
Standard theories of insurance, dating from Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976), stress the role of adver...
Adverse selection and moral hazard are two effects of incomplete information in the market for healt...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously in-fluential among scholars...
Willardsen presented on his upcoming article with the same title. The abstract from this paper is a...
Given that, in equilibrium, all agents freely opt for strictly positive own coverage, competitive mo...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously influential among scholars,...
Advantageous selection occurs when the agents most eager to buy insurance are also the cheapest one...
In the classic Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976) model of insurance under adverse selection, it is ass...
Human behavior, rational or irrational one, influences one of the most complex markets worldwide: th...
Human behavior, rational or irrational one, influences one of the most complex markets worldwide: th...
In this survey we present some of the more significant results in the literature on adverse selectio...
We examine insurance markets in which there are two types of customers: those who regret suboptimal ...
We examine insurance markets in which there are two types of customers: those who regret suboptimal ...
Standard theories of insurance, dating from Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976), stress the role of adver...
Adverse selection and moral hazard are two effects of incomplete information in the market for healt...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously in-fluential among scholars...
Willardsen presented on his upcoming article with the same title. The abstract from this paper is a...
Given that, in equilibrium, all agents freely opt for strictly positive own coverage, competitive mo...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously influential among scholars,...
Advantageous selection occurs when the agents most eager to buy insurance are also the cheapest one...
In the classic Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976) model of insurance under adverse selection, it is ass...