Comparing Solutions to Moral Hazard in Credit and Labor Markets
The strategies used to mitigate moral hazard in credit markets are analogous to those in labor markets. In lending, the principal (lender) requires the agent (borrower) to have a stake in the outcome through equity or collateral. Similarly, in employment, a principal (employer) can address a lack of effort by paying a higher wage, which creates an employment rent. In both cases, the agent has something to lose, which incentivizes them to act in the principal's interest.
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CORE Econ
Ch.10 Market successes and failures: The societal effects of private decisions - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Credit Rationing Based on Borrower Trustworthiness
Interest Rate Variation Among Borrowers
Unavoidable Risks in Lending
Contractual Unenforceability in Lending Due to Borrower Insolvency
Relationship Between Wealth, Project Quality, and Credit
Figure 9.17: Comparing the Credit and Labor Markets as Principal-Agent Relationships
Credit Constraints for the Wealth-Limited Due to Lack of Collateral or Equity
Credit Constraints as a Consequence of Hidden Actions in Lending
Risk-Free Loan Repayment Calculation
Determinants of Loan Repayment Probability
Comparison of Moral Hazard in Credit and Insurance Markets
Incompleteness of Loan Contracts Due to Unenforceable Borrower Behavior
Comparing Solutions to Moral Hazard in Credit and Labor Markets
Lender's Expected Payoff from a Risky Loan
Information Asymmetry in Lending
Figure 9.18: How Endowments Shape Relationships in Credit and Labour Markets
Lender's Repayment Expectation as a Condition for Lending
Contractual Unenforceability of Repayment Due to Borrower Insolvency
A decade ago, the dominant ride-sharing company, 'RideFast,' was forced by regulators to open its driver-matching technology to competitors. In the years that followed, a new entrant, 'GoDrive,' leveraged this access and its own innovations to capture 80% of the market, leading to new regulatory scrutiny. What does this sequence of events primarily illustrate about the nature of competition policy?
A bank provides a loan to an entrepreneur to expand their existing, stable catering business. However, the entrepreneur secretly considers using the funds to launch a risky, unproven food truck venture instead. Why does this situation represent a fundamental conflict of interest in a lending relationship?
Loan Use and Unobservable Actions
Analyzing the Lender-Borrower Dynamic
In a lender-borrower relationship, the principal-agent problem can be completely eliminated by creating a highly detailed loan contract that specifies exactly how the funds must be used.
Aligning Incentives in a Loan Agreement
A microfinance institution provides a loan to a farmer specifically for purchasing premium, drought-resistant seeds. Once the funds are given, the institution cannot easily confirm whether the farmer bought the specified seeds or opted for cheaper, standard seeds, potentially using the remaining funds for other purposes. If a drought leads to crop failure and the farmer defaults, what is the fundamental issue this situation highlights for the lender?
A credit union provides a loan to a farmer to purchase a new, reliable tractor for harvesting crops. From the credit union's perspective, which of the following scenarios best illustrates the core conflict of interest that arises because it cannot perfectly observe the farmer's actions after the loan is disbursed?
Startup Funding and Risk-Taking
Comparing Conflicts of Interest
Analyzing the Lender-Borrower Dynamic
Learn After
A bank requires a startup founder to personally invest 25% of the total required funding before it will provide a loan for the remaining 75%. In a different situation, a company pays its remote employees a wage that is 20% higher than the market average for similar roles. What underlying issue do both of these strategies primarily address?
Incentive Design for Remote Workers
Comparing Incentive Mechanisms in Different Markets
Match each role or concept from the credit market with its direct analogue in the labor market, based on the principal-agent framework for addressing moral hazard.
Identifying Common Incentive Mechanisms
Requiring a borrower to provide collateral for a loan and paying an employee a wage higher than the market average are both strategies primarily designed to solve the problem of adverse selection by revealing the agent's hidden characteristics before a contract is signed.
Evaluating Incentive Structures
Evaluating Incentive Structures
Analysis of Incentive Misalignment
Designing an Incentive Scheme for Scholarship Recipients
Match each role or concept from the credit market with its direct analogue in the labor market, based on the principal-agent framework for addressing moral hazard.