Moral hazard,monitoring costs,and optimal government intervention |
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Authors: | Neil Bruce Kar-Yiu Wong |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Economics, University of Washington, 98195, Seattle, WA 2. Department of Economics, University of Washington, 98195, Seattle, WA
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Abstract: | When insurance firms can monitor with non-prohibitive costs the consumption of risk-influencing goods by an insured, they have incentives to tax-subsidize the insured's consumption of the goods. If the government cannot monitor at a lower cost than private insurers, intervention is neither needed nor desirable. Where the government does have a monitoring-cost advantage, it cannot achieve a constrained optimum by commodity tax-subsidies alone. It must also augment the level of insurance and, in some cases, prohibit private tax-subsidies by insurers. Such “invasive” intervention can be avoided if the government regulates the consumption of the risk-influencing goods. |
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