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Consumer Rationale in Insurance Selection
An insurance company offers two health insurance plans. Plan A has a high monthly premium and a low deductible. Plan B has a low monthly premium and a high deductible. Analyze the decision-making process for both a high-risk individual (who anticipates needing frequent medical care) and a low-risk individual (who does not) when choosing between these two plans. Explain why each type of individual is likely to prefer one plan over the other, focusing on their expected total out-of-pocket costs.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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Predicting Insurance Choices
A car insurance company that previously offered a single, standardized policy to all its customers decides to introduce a new strategy. It now offers two distinct plans: Plan X has a very low deductible but a high monthly premium, while Plan Y has a very high deductible but a low monthly premium. From the company's perspective, what is the primary analytical benefit of offering this choice?
Consumer Rationale in Insurance Selection
Rationale for Insurance Plan Selection
An insurance company offers two health plans. Match each customer profile to the insurance plan and rationale that best reflects their likely choice due to self-selection.
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When an insurance company offers a menu of policies with different premium-deductible trade-offs, the process of customers choosing plans that align with their private risk assessment is known as ____, which helps the insurer overcome the problem of hidden information.
An insurance company faces a market with both high-risk and low-risk individuals but cannot initially distinguish between them. Arrange the following events in the logical order that illustrates the process of self-selection.
An auto insurance company offers two distinct plans to a population of drivers with varying, but unobservable, risk levels. Plan A has a high monthly premium and a very low deductible. Plan B has a low monthly premium and a very high deductible. Which statement best analyzes the underlying economic principle that causes drivers to sort themselves by risk when choosing between these two plans?
Critique of an Insurance Strategy