Competitive insurance markets with two unobservables

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Abstract

I study a screening game in a competitive insurance market in which insurance customers differ with respect to both accident probability and degree of risk aversion. It is shown that indifference curves of customers may cross twice; thus the single crossing property does not hold. When differences in risk aversion are sufficiently large, firms cannot use policy deductibles to screen high-risk customers. Types may be pooled in equilibrium or are separated by raising premiums above actuarially fair levels. This leads to excessive entry of firms in equilibrium.

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Smart, M. (2000). Competitive insurance markets with two unobservables. International Economic Review, 41(1), 153–170. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2354.00059

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