This article attempts to understand the outcomes when each party of an insurance contract simultaneously has superior information. I assume that policyholders have superior information about specific risks while insurers have superior information about general risks. I find that low-general-risk policyholders purchase insurance, while high-general-risk policyholders are self-insured. Among the low-general-risk policyholders, high-specific-risk policyholders purchase full insurance, while low-specific-risk policyholders purchase partial insurance. When insurers can strategically publicize their information, efficiency is improved because high-general-risk policyholders purchase actuarially fair insurance. The market segmentation is also found based on the general-risk type and the publicizing of information. © 2009 The Journal of Risk and Insurance.
CITATION STYLE
Seog, S. H. (2009). Insurance markets with differential information. Journal of Risk and Insurance, 76(2), 279–294. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1539-6975.2009.01299.x
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