Moral Hazard as a Challenge for Home Price Insurance
Home price insurance, which protects homeowners against a decline in their property's value, creates a moral hazard problem. This issue arises because the insurance shields owners from the financial losses associated with property value depreciation. Consequently, their incentive to undertake costly maintenance for their home or contribute to neighborhood upkeep is diminished, as their unobservable actions (or inactions) no longer directly impact their financial risk.
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economics
Economy
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.9 Lenders and borrowers and differences in wealth - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Related
Feasibility Challenges of Private Home Price Insurance
Moral Hazard as a Challenge for Home Price Insurance
Adverse Selection as a Challenge for Home Price Insurance
Definition of Moral Hazard (Hidden Actions)
Differentiating Negligence from Bad Luck in Insurance Claims
Incentive Alignment as a Partial Solution to Hidden-Action Problems
Moral Hazard in Labor Markets
Contractual Limits in Insurance to Mitigate Moral Hazard
Incompleteness of Insurance Contracts due to Hidden Actions
Market Failure as a Consequence of Hidden Actions
A company hires a remote salesperson on a fixed monthly salary to generate new leads. The number of successful leads generated depends on both the salesperson's effort in making calls and researching clients, as well as external factors like the overall economic climate and competitor actions. The company cannot directly monitor the salesperson's day-to-day activities. Why does this arrangement present a hidden action problem?
Insurance and Risky Behavior
Government Bailouts and Future Risk
A health insurance company notices that individuals who are more likely to need extensive medical care are the ones most eager to purchase its comprehensive insurance policies. This situation is a classic example of a hidden action problem.
Analyzing Performance Under Uncertainty
Match each scenario with the description that best explains whether it represents a hidden action problem.
Evaluating Solutions to Moral Hazard in Unemployment Benefits
In a hidden action problem, the presence of ______ makes it difficult for one party to determine whether a negative outcome was caused by the other party's unobservable behavior or by factors beyond anyone's control.
A driver purchases a full-coverage auto insurance policy. Arrange the following events to illustrate the logical progression of a hidden action problem from the insurer's perspective.
Evaluating CEO Compensation Structures
Moral Hazard as a Challenge for Home Price Insurance
Designing an Employment Contract to Mitigate Hidden Actions
A company hires a remote salesperson and offers them a fixed monthly salary, with no performance-based commissions. The company cannot easily monitor the salesperson's day-to-day effort. Which of the following outcomes is the most direct consequence of this information arrangement?
When an insurance company offers a policy, it cannot know for certain whether a policyholder will engage in risky behaviors after purchasing the coverage. This situation, where one party's actions post-agreement are unobservable to the other, is an example of a __________ problem.
Origin of the Term 'Moral Hazard' in Insurance
Divergence of Social and Private Benefit in Principal-Agent Problems
The Inefficiency of Insured Behavior
Inefficiency in the Rental Market
A company owner pays a manager a fixed salary to run a new project. The project's success depends on both the manager's effort and random market factors. The owner cannot directly observe the manager's level of effort. The manager, knowing this, chooses to exert low effort because high effort is personally costly and does not increase their fixed salary. This leads to a lower probability of the project's success. Why is this outcome considered Pareto inefficient?
Insured Driver's Risky Behavior
Role of External Uncertainty in Hidden-Action Problems
Moral Hazard as a Challenge for Home Price Insurance
A company hires a salesperson on a fixed salary, regardless of the number of sales they make. The salesperson's daily effort level, which directly influences sales but is difficult for the manager to monitor, subsequently declines. Which element of this scenario best illustrates the 'hidden action' that characterizes a moral hazard problem?
Information Asymmetry in Auto Repair
Analyzing an Insurance Scenario
Moral hazard arises primarily because one party in a transaction has more or better information about their own inherent risk level than the other party before the transaction occurs.
A car owner purchases a comprehensive insurance policy that covers all repair costs from accidents. Because the owner knows they are fully protected from the financial cost of repairs, they begin to drive more recklessly, an action the insurance company cannot directly observe. Analyze this scenario by matching each element to its correct role in the described problem.
Deconstructing the Principal-Agent Problem of Unobservable Actions
Moral hazard is often referred to as the 'hidden ______' problem because it arises when one party in an agreement cannot observe the post-contractual behavior of the other party.
Arrange the following events to illustrate the typical progression of a moral hazard problem, from its initial conditions to its outcome.
Corporate Governance and Executive Incentives
Which of the following scenarios provides the clearest example of a problem arising from a 'hidden action' after an agreement is made?
Moral hazard arises primarily because one party in a transaction has more or better information about their own inherent risk level than the other party before the transaction occurs.
Learn After
Neglected Maintenance Due to Home Price Insurance
Unobservable Effort and Insured Outcomes in Home Price Insurance
Reduced Contribution to Neighborhood Upkeep due to Home Price Insurance
Comparison of Moral Hazard and Adverse Selection in Home Price Insurance
Index-Based Home Price Insurance as a Solution to Moral Hazard