We provide a new foundation of risk aversion by showing that the propension to exploit insurance opportunities fully describes this attitude. Our foundation, which applies to any probabilistically sophisticated preference, well accords with the commonly held prudential interpretation of risk aversion that dates back to the seminal works of Arrow (1963) and Pratt (1964). In our main results, we first characterize the Arrow-Pratt risk aversion in terms of propension to full insurance and the stronger notion of risk aversion of Rothschild and Stiglitz (1970) in terms of propension to partial insurance. We then extend the analysis to comparative risk aversion by showing that the notion of Yaari (1969) corresponds to comparative propension to ...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously in-fluential among scholars...
We propose a simple model with preference-based adverse selection and moral hazard that formalizes t...
The paper discusses criteria for comparing risk aversion of decision makers when outcomes are multid...
Empirical testing of asymmetric information in the insurance market has uncovered a negative correla...
The economic literature on the demand for non-life insurance has mainly emphasized the influence of ...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously influential among scholars,...
According to the orthodox treatment of risk preferences in decision theory, they are to be explained...
Risk aversion is traditionally defined in the context of lotteries over monetary payoffs. This paper...
The risk premium is affected by loss aversion and probability distortions as well as utility curvatu...
One significant division that emerged during the conference involved the role of risk aversion in an...
All orders of risk attitude have been extensively studied within a univariate utility framework. For...
We consider decision-makers facing a risky wealth prospect. The probability distribution depends on ...
As is well known, Arrow-Pratt measure of risk aversion explains investors’ behavior in stock markets...
Advantageous selection occurs when the agents most eager to buy insurance are also the cheapest one...
Generally, in the standard presentation of the expected utility model, the risk premium represents h...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously in-fluential among scholars...
We propose a simple model with preference-based adverse selection and moral hazard that formalizes t...
The paper discusses criteria for comparing risk aversion of decision makers when outcomes are multid...
Empirical testing of asymmetric information in the insurance market has uncovered a negative correla...
The economic literature on the demand for non-life insurance has mainly emphasized the influence of ...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously influential among scholars,...
According to the orthodox treatment of risk preferences in decision theory, they are to be explained...
Risk aversion is traditionally defined in the context of lotteries over monetary payoffs. This paper...
The risk premium is affected by loss aversion and probability distortions as well as utility curvatu...
One significant division that emerged during the conference involved the role of risk aversion in an...
All orders of risk attitude have been extensively studied within a univariate utility framework. For...
We consider decision-makers facing a risky wealth prospect. The probability distribution depends on ...
As is well known, Arrow-Pratt measure of risk aversion explains investors’ behavior in stock markets...
Advantageous selection occurs when the agents most eager to buy insurance are also the cheapest one...
Generally, in the standard presentation of the expected utility model, the risk premium represents h...
The theory of adverse selection in insurance markets has been enormously in-fluential among scholars...
We propose a simple model with preference-based adverse selection and moral hazard that formalizes t...
The paper discusses criteria for comparing risk aversion of decision makers when outcomes are multid...