Evaluating a Standardized Policy for Post-Agreement Risk
A financial regulator proposes a single, standardized policy to reduce risky behavior in both credit and insurance markets. The policy mandates increased, direct monitoring of the party that received the funds or coverage and imposes severe, automatic financial penalties if a negative outcome (like a loan default or a large insurance claim) occurs. Critically evaluate this 'one-size-fits-all' approach. In your response, analyze the potential effectiveness and drawbacks of this policy, explaining why it might succeed or fail differently in the context of a business loan versus a car insurance policy.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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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
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Analyzing Post-Agreement Behavior
A small business owner secures a loan to purchase new, efficient machinery but instead uses the funds to invest in a highly speculative, unrelated project. In a separate scenario, a driver who purchases a premium auto insurance policy with a low deductible begins to drive more aggressively and parks in less secure locations. What core economic issue is common to both situations?
Comparing Risk Mitigation Strategies
In economic agreements where one party's subsequent actions are hidden, a conflict of interest can emerge. Match the corresponding roles, actions, and outcomes from a credit (lending) context to their parallels in an insurance context.
In economic agreements where one party's subsequent actions are hidden, a conflict of interest can emerge. Match the corresponding roles, actions, and outcomes from a credit (lending) context to their parallels in an insurance context.
Critique of Moral Hazard Equivalence
While the problem of an agent changing their behavior after an agreement is common to both credit and insurance markets, a key distinction exists in the agent's motivation. Which statement best characterizes this distinction?
The problem of an agent altering their behavior after an agreement is established is fundamentally the same in both lending and insurance contexts, as in both cases the agent is incentivized to take on greater risk because they are shielded from the full financial consequences of a negative outcome.
Evaluating a Standardized Policy for Post-Agreement Risk
Comparative Analysis of Post-Agreement Risk Management