Example

Health Insurance and High-Risk Individuals

An insurance company offers a health insurance plan at a single price based on the average risk of the population. Individuals with pre-existing conditions or high-risk lifestyles, who know they are more likely to need medical care, are more inclined to purchase this insurance. Low-risk individuals, who find the premium too high for their expected needs, may opt out. This leads to the insurance pool being disproportionately composed of high-risk individuals, driving up costs for the insurer. This is an adverse selection problem.

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Updated 2025-08-23

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