We examine insurance markets in which there are two types of customers: those who regret suboptimal decisions and those who don’t. In this setting, we characterize the equilibria under hidden information about the typeof customers and hidden action. We show that both pooling and separating equilibria can exist. Furthermore, there exist separating equilibria that predict a positive correlation between the amount of insurance coverage and risk type, as in the standard economic models of adverse selection, but there also exist separating equilibria that predict a negative correlation between the amount of insurance coverage and risk type, i.e.advantageous selection. Since optimal choice of regretful customers depends on foregone alternatives, ...
We consider a model of competitive insurance markets under asymmetric information with ambiguity-ave...
This paper investigates equilibrium in an insurance market where risk classification is restricted. ...
Government intervention in insurance markets is ubiquitous and the theoretical basis for such interv...
We examine insurance markets in which there are two types of customers: those who regret suboptimal ...
We examine insurance markets with two types of customers: those who regret suboptimal decisions and ...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously influential among scholars,...
Standard theories of insurance, dating from Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976), stress the role of adver...
Advantageous selection occurs when the agents most eager to buy insurance are also the cheapest one...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously in-fluential among scholars...
Advantageous (or propitious) selection occurs when an increase in the premium of an in- surance cont...
Theories of adverse selection and moral hazard predict the occurrence of the risk and the coverage o...
We analyse a 2-period competitive insurance market which is characterized by the simultaneous presen...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
In this survey we present some of the more significant results in the literature on adverse selectio...
We consider a model of competitive insurance markets under asymmetric information with ambiguity-ave...
This paper investigates equilibrium in an insurance market where risk classification is restricted. ...
Government intervention in insurance markets is ubiquitous and the theoretical basis for such interv...
We examine insurance markets in which there are two types of customers: those who regret suboptimal ...
We examine insurance markets with two types of customers: those who regret suboptimal decisions and ...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously influential among scholars,...
Standard theories of insurance, dating from Rothschild and Stiglitz (1976), stress the role of adver...
Advantageous selection occurs when the agents most eager to buy insurance are also the cheapest one...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously in-fluential among scholars...
Advantageous (or propitious) selection occurs when an increase in the premium of an in- surance cont...
Theories of adverse selection and moral hazard predict the occurrence of the risk and the coverage o...
We analyse a 2-period competitive insurance market which is characterized by the simultaneous presen...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
We examine equilibria in competitive insurance markets with adverse selection when wealth difference...
In this survey we present some of the more significant results in the literature on adverse selectio...
We consider a model of competitive insurance markets under asymmetric information with ambiguity-ave...
This paper investigates equilibrium in an insurance market where risk classification is restricted. ...
Government intervention in insurance markets is ubiquitous and the theoretical basis for such interv...