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Adverse Selection The good risks drop out.

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Adverse Selection. The good risks drop out.. A common story.. Insurer offers a new type of policy. Hoping to make money. It loses money. Reason given: too many bad risks bought the policy. That is, adverse selection. What’s wrong with that story?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Adverse Selection

Adverse Selection

The good risks drop out.

Page 2: Adverse Selection

A common story.

Insurer offers a new type of policy. Hoping to make money. It loses money. Reason given: too many bad risks

bought the policy. That is, adverse selection.

Page 3: Adverse Selection

What’s wrong with that story?

It’s naive: Of course the bad risks want in. That’s no surprise.

What matters are the good risks who didn’t buy.

The answer is, usually, tighter underwriting.

Page 4: Adverse Selection

Why do the good risks drop out?

High premium Why is the premium high? Too many bad risks. More good risks drop out. Vicious circle.

Page 5: Adverse Selection

The result is lack of markets

Some things that aren’t insured. Results of medical tests. Private health insurance gaps. Financial markets in less developed

countries.

Page 6: Adverse Selection

Static adverse selection

Asymmetric information

Hidden values (moral hazard was hidden actions)

Page 7: Adverse Selection

Information asymmetry is key

The client knows his risk.

The insurer doesn’t know the client’s risk, but it knows the situation.

Page 8: Adverse Selection

Story of a house

It’s worth $1000.

Probability of loss is between 0 and .002.

Fair premium is between zero and two dollars.

Page 9: Adverse Selection

Notation

x is probability of loss, x on [0,2] . This x is in thousandths.

P is the market price of insurance, between 0 and 2 thousandths.

f(x) is the probability density function of risk. f(x)= .5 on [0,2]

E(x) is expected probability of loss, =1

Page 10: Adverse Selection

Adverse selection: given market price P

Assumed behavior: consumers with risks of .5P and above buy insurance.

They will pay no more than twice the fair price.

The good risks, x<.5P, drop out.

Page 11: Adverse Selection

Result: more notation

f(x|P) is probability density function of risk, given market price P.

f(x|P) = 1/(2-.5P).

E(x|P) is expected risk given market price P.

E(x|P) = .5(.5P)+.5(2) = 1+.25P

Page 12: Adverse Selection

Probabilitydensity

.5

0 2

1= E(x)

f(x)=.5

Expected loss

1+.25P = E(x|P)

f(x|P)=1/(2-.5P)

.5P

Page 13: Adverse Selection

Insurers response

E(x|P)>P Exit or raise price. E(x|P)<P Enter or lower price.

Page 14: Adverse Selection

The market clears

When E(x|P)=P. 1+.25P=P P=4/3. Risks from [0,2/3] (the good risks) are

not insured. Lost profit opportunity. Market failure.

Page 15: Adverse Selection

Solutions

To capture profit and eliminate market failure...

Underwrite carefully. Use separating contracts.

Page 16: Adverse Selection

George Akerlof

Writing about financial markets in less developed countries.

Why there are none (circa 1971). Illustrating with used cars.

Page 17: Adverse Selection

Market for lemons.

A lemon is a car that is prodigiously prone to needing repair.

Used cars.

Page 18: Adverse Selection

Nightmare

You are about to pay someone $10K for his used car.

He knows the car, you don’t. He prefers the $10K. Shouldn’t you do likewise.

Page 19: Adverse Selection

Keys to adverse selection

The seller knows the quality. The buyer doesn’t. That is asymmetric information or

hidden value.

Page 20: Adverse Selection

Notation

x is the quality of the car. On [0,2] P is the market price. f(x) is the probability density function of

quality. f(x)= .5 on [0,2] E(x) is the expected quality. =1

Page 21: Adverse Selection

More notation

f(x|P) is probability density function of quality, given market price P. f(x|P)=1/P.

E(x|P) is expectation of quality given market price P.E(x|P)=P/2

Page 22: Adverse Selection

Probabilitydensity

.5

0 2

1=expectation

f(x)=.5

P

f(x|P)=1/P

P/2=conditionalexpectation

Quality of car

Page 23: Adverse Selection

Buyers like cars more than sellers

If quality is x, seller will accept x dollars. If expected quality is x, the buyer will

pay 1.5x dollars.

Page 24: Adverse Selection

The market does not exist

Suppose there is a market with price P(we’ll see that that can’t be).

Cars of quality 0<x<P are offered. Expected quality is P/2. The buyers will pay 1.5 times P/2. Or 3/4 times P. Therefore P cannot be the market price. And that is true for any P.

Page 25: Adverse Selection

Nonexistence theory

Unfamiliar. Important.

Page 26: Adverse Selection

Markets that do exist

Solve adverse selection through careful underwriting …

or separating contracts.

Page 27: Adverse Selection

Solutions

Get an inspection. Get a warrantee. Either way, informational asymmetry is

removed.

Page 28: Adverse Selection