Chapter 16: Problem 9
What is an insurance premium?
/*! This file is auto-generated */ .wp-block-button__link{color:#fff;background-color:#32373c;border-radius:9999px;box-shadow:none;text-decoration:none;padding:calc(.667em + 2px) calc(1.333em + 2px);font-size:1.125em}.wp-block-file__button{background:#32373c;color:#fff;text-decoration:none}
Learning Materials
Features
Discover
Chapter 16: Problem 9
What is an insurance premium?
All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.
Get started for free
For each of the following purchases, say whether you would expect the degree of imperfect information to be relatively high or relatively low: a. Buying apples at a roadside stand b. Buying dinner at the neighborhood restaurant around the comer c. Buying a used laptop computer at a garage sale d. Ordering flowers over the internet for your friend in a different city
What are some of the metrics economists use to measure health outcomes?
How might adverse selection make it difficult for an insurance market to operate?
In an insurance system, would you expect each person to receive in benefits pretty much what they pay in premiums or is it just that the average benefits paid will equal the average premiums paid?
To what sorts of customers would an insurance company offer a policy with a high copay? What about a high premium with a lower copay?
What do you think about this solution?
We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.