CASE FAIR OSTER PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS E L E V E N T H E D I T I O N. PEARSON 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

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PART II The Market System: Choices Made by Households and Firms PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS E L E V E N T H E D I T I O N CASE FAIR OSTER PEARSON 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Prepared by: Fernando Quijano w/shelly Tefft

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Uncertainty and Asymmetric Information 17 CHAPTER OUTLINE Decision Making Under Uncertainty: The Tools Expected Value Expected Utility Attitudes Toward Risk Asymmetric Information Adverse Selection Market Signaling Moral Hazard Incentives Labor Market Incentives 3 of 17

Decision Making Under Uncertainty: The Tools Expected Value payoff The amount that comes from a possible outcome or result. expected value The sum of the payoffs associated with each possible outcome of a situation weighted by its probability of occurring. The expected value (EV) of a coin toss with a payoff of +$1 for heads and $1 for tails and a probability of ½ for heads and ½ for tails is: EV = 1/2 ($1) + 1/2 ( $1) = 0 The financial value of this deal to me, or its expected value, is $0. Half the time I win a dollar, and half the time I lose a dollar. fair game or fair bet A game whose expected value is zero. 4 of 17

Expected Utility diminishing marginal utility The more of any one good consumed in a given period, the less incremental satisfaction is generated by consuming a marginal or incremental unit of the same good. FIGURE 17.1 The Relationship Between Utility and Income The figure shows the way in which utility increases with income for a hypothetical person, Jacob. Notice that utility increases with income but at a decreasing rate: the curve gets flatter as income increases. This curve shows diminishing marginal utility of income. 5 of 17

Rather than earning $40,000 for sure, at the end of the year, a manager will toss a coin. If it is heads, Jacob will earn $60,000; but if the coin turns up tails, his earnings will fall to $20,000. The expected value of the two salaries is the same. EV = 1/2 ($20,000) + 1/2 ($60,000) = $40,000 expected utility The sum of the utilities coming from all possible outcomes of a deal, weighted by the probability of each occurring. In the coin-toss salary offer, the expected utility (EU) is EU = 1/2 U($20,000) + 1/2 U($60,000), which reduces to EU = 1/2 (10) + 1/2 (18) = 14 Since Jacob s utility from a fixed salary of $40,000 is 15, he will not take the coin-toss salary alternative. 6 of 17

Attitudes Toward Risk risk-averse Refers to a person s preference of a certain payoff over an uncertain one with the same expected value. risk-neutral Refers to a person s willingness to take a bet with an expected value of zero. risk-loving Refers to a person s preference for an uncertain deal over a certain deal with an equal expected value. The presence of risk and uncertainty do not by themselves pose a problem for the workings of the market. 7 of 17

FIGURE 17.2 Risk Aversion and Insurance Markets With a 50 percent chance of earning $40,000 and a 50 percent chance of becoming disabled and earning $0, Jacob has an EV of income of $20,000. But his expected utility is halfway between the utility of $40,000 (15) and the utility of 0 (0), or 7.5. $x is the amount of certain earnings Jacob would accept to avoid a 50 percent chance of earning $0. EV = 1/2($40,000) + 1/2($0) = $20,000 EU = 1/2U($0) +.1/2U($40,000) EU = 1/2(0) + 1/2(15) = 7.5 8 of 17

Asymmetric Information asymmetric information One of the parties to a transaction has information relevant to the transaction that the other party does not have. Adverse Selection adverse selection A situation in which asymmetric information results in highquality goods or high-quality consumers being squeezed out of transactions because they cannot demonstrate their quality. 9 of 17

Adverse Selection and Lemons The used car setting highlights the market failure associated with adverse selection. Because one party to the transaction the seller has better information than the other party and because people behave opportunistically, owners of high-quality cars will have difficulty selling them. Buyers who are interested in peaches (good cars) will find it hard to buy one because they cannot tell a lemon (a bad car) from a peach and thus are not willing to offer a high enough price to make the transaction. The market, which is normally good at moving goods from consumers who place a lower value on a good to consumers with higher values, does not work properly. 10 of 17

Adverse Selection and Insurance For a given premium level, those who know themselves to be most in need of medical care will be most attracted to the insurance. As unhealthy people swell the ranks of the insured, premiums will rise. The higher the rates, the less attractive healthy people will find such insurance. Reducing Adverse Selection Problems Individuals, markets, and the government try to reduce adverse selection problems. The Health Care Reform Act of 2010 began moving the United States toward universal health coverage. To the extent that universal coverage reduces choice, it reduces the adverse selection problem. 11 of 17

E C O N O M I C S I N P R A C T I C E Adverse Selection in the Health Care Market Health care is one area in which insurers worry about the problem of adverse selection. A recent study on long-term care insurance and Huntington s disease (HD) illustrates the issue. Individuals who carry the HD genetic mutation are up to five times as likely as the general population to buy long-term care insurance, indicating that adverse selection is both present and strong. As genetic testing increases, situations of adverse selection in the health care area are likely to increase and we will be confronted with harder choices on how much genetic testing to reveal. THINKING PRACTICALLY 1. Economists have found that many young single people do not buy health care insurance. Why not? 12 of 17

E C O N O M I C S I N P R A C T I C E How to Read Advertisements Recognizing that profit-seeking individuals place ads lets us draw conclusions about the information they do not provide. This same logic can be used in a corporate setting. In 2002, Congress and the president passed new accounting rules that require firms to inform shareholders of the stock options they give to their executives and the effect of those options on the firms costs. Not surprisingly, those firms for whom options costs were large chose to place information in footnotes, while firms with fewer options to disclose were more forthcoming. Lack of information sometimes serves as a signal. THINKING PRACTICALLY If a box of raisins claims it contains at least 100 raisins, do you think it is likely that there are 200? 13 of 17

Market Signaling market signaling Actions taken by buyers and sellers to communicate quality in a world of uncertainty. Moral Hazard moral hazard Arises when one party to a contract changes behavior in response to that contract and thus passes on the costs of that behavior change to the other party. 14 of 17

Incentives mechanism design A contract or an institution that aligns the interests of two parties in a transaction. A piece rate, for example, creates incentives for a worker to work hard, just as his or her superior wants. A co-pay in the health care industry encourages more careful use of health care, just as the insurance company wants. Labor Market Incentives Variable compensation can help firms get better performance from their workforce. One reason that many companies design compensation with a component that varies with performance is that they want to attract the right kind of employees and screen out poor workers. Many have argued that compensation in the financial industry can be traced to excess risk taking. 15 of 17

E C O N O M I C S I N P R A C T I C E How s the Snow? We can see why resorts might have an incentive to exaggerate the frequency of snowfall. More fresh snow in the report entices more skiers. Zinman and Zitzewitz realized that the incentive to over-report snow was especially prominent on weekends, when more opportunistic one day skiers are likely to be enticed to a particular area. There are 23% more reports of natural, new, or fresh snow by resorts on weekends than on weekdays. On average, of course, it snows more or less equally on each day of the week. But take heart skiers: Zinman and Zitzewitz also found that a new iphone app that allows skiers at a slope to report conditions to others has dramatically reduced the over-reporting problem. THINKING PRACTICALLY 1. What do you think stimulated the demand for this new iphone app? 16 of 17

R E V I E W T E R M S A N D C O N C E P T S adverse selection asymmetric information diminishing marginal utility expected utility expected value fair game or fair bet market signaling mechanism design moral hazard payoff risk-averse risk-loving risk-neutral risk premium 17 of 17