Contracting with Moral Hazard, Adverse Selection and Risk Neutrality

Contracting with Moral Hazard, Adverse Selection and Risk Neutrality
Author: Felipe Balmaceda
Publisher:
Total Pages: 41
Release: 2018
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper studies a principal-agent model in which the principal and agent are risk-neutral, there are two actions, adverse selection, moral hazard and limited liability. When the two actions are subject to moral hazard, there is no distortion at the top, the optimal action profile is downward distorted for everyone else and the optimal menu of contract exhibits the one-size-fits-all property; that is, each ability type receives the same contract. The optimal contract pays a bonus when the outcome with the highest likelihood ratio is observed and the limited liability otherwise. When one of the actions is contractible and the other is subject to moral hazard, there is no distortion at the top, the non-contractible action is downward distorted for everyone else, the contractible action can be either upward or downward distorted. The optimal contract no longer exhibits the one-size-fits-all property. The one-size-fits-all property sheds light why we rarely observe menus of contracts in market that use franchising, credit and labor markets, and in regulated industries.

Optimal Contracts Under Moral Hazard and Adverse Selection

Optimal Contracts Under Moral Hazard and Adverse Selection
Author: Jaeyoung Sung
Publisher:
Total Pages: 51
Release: 2008
Genre:
ISBN:

In spite of the importance of optimal contracting problems under moral hazard and adverse selection, current literature offers no optimal solutions to contracting problems under moral hazard and adverse selection with risk averse agents. The agent's risk aversion, however, appears to be critical for understanding managerial compensation problems. We present a continuous-time agency model with a risk-averse agent and a risk-neutral principal to show that moral hazard and adverse selection can be optimally resolved with a menu of linear contracts. In application, we discuss a few managerial compensation problems involving managerial project selection and capital budgeting decisions, and show that a flat-wage contract is sometimes optimal.

Optimal Contracts Under Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard

Optimal Contracts Under Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

This article presents a continuous-time agency model in the presence of adverse selection and moral hazard with a risk-averse agent and a risk-neutral principal. Under the model setup, we show that the optimal controls are constant over time, and thus the optimal menu consists of contracts that are linear in the final outcome. We also show that when a moral hazard problem adds to an adverse selection problem, the monotonicity condition well known in the pure adverse selection literature needs to be modified to ensure the incentive compatibility for information revelation. The model is applied to a few managerial compensation problems involving managerial project selection and capital budgeting decisions. We argue that in the third-best world, the relationship between the volatility of the outcome and the sensitivity of the contract depends on interactions between the managerial cost and the firm`s production functions. Contrary to conventional wisdom, sometimes the higher the volatility, the higher the sensitivity of the contract. The firm receiving good news sometimes chooses safer projects or invests less than it does with bad news. We also examine the effects of the observability of the volatility on corporate investment decisions.

Simple Contracts with Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard

Simple Contracts with Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard
Author: Daniel Gottlieb
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

We study a principal-agent model with both moral hazard and adverse selection. Risk-neutral agents with limited liability have arbitrary private information about the distribution of outputs and the cost of effort. We obtain conditions under which the optimal mechanism offers a single contract to all types. These conditions are always satisfied, for example, if output is binary or if the distribution of outputs is multiplicatively separable and ordered by FOSD (if it is not ordered, the optimal mechanism offers at most two contracts). If, in addition, the marginal distribution satisfies the monotone likelihood ratio property, this single contract is a debt contract. Our model suggests that offering a single contract may be optimal in environments with adverse selection and moral hazard, where offering flexible menus of contracts provides gaming opportunities to the agent.

Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard in Contract Law

Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard in Contract Law
Author: Nicole Petrick
Publisher: GRIN Verlag
Total Pages: 25
Release: 2009
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3640394127

Essay aus dem Jahr 2005 im Fachbereich BWL - Recht, Note: 1,7, Higher School of Economics Moscow, Russia, Sprache: Deutsch, Abstract: Legal and economical interpretations of contract, contract law and contract theory, asymmetric information, adverse selection and moral hazard. Paper explains negative effects of adverse selection and moral hazard for the case of transaction costs and incomplete contracts and describes incentives to avoid adverse selection and moral hazard, such as signaling and deductibles as well as indemnity contracts and valued contracts.

The Economics of Contracts, second edition

The Economics of Contracts, second edition
Author: Bernard Salanie
Publisher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2017-02-17
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0262534223

A concise introduction to the theory of contracts, emphasizing basic tools that allow the reader to understand the main theoretical models; revised and updated throughout for this edition. The theory of contracts grew out of the failure of the general equilibrium model to account for the strategic interactions among agents that arise from informational asymmetries. This popular text, revised and updated throughout for the second edition, serves as a concise and rigorous introduction to the theory of contracts for graduate students and professional economists. The book presents the main models of the theory of contracts, particularly the basic models of adverse selection, signaling, and moral hazard. It emphasizes the methods used to analyze the models, but also includes brief introductions to many of the applications in different fields of economics. The goal is to give readers the tools to understand the basic models and create their own. For the second edition, major changes have been made to chapter 3, on examples and extensions for the adverse selection model, which now includes more thorough discussions of multiprincipals, collusion, and multidimensional adverse selection, and to chapter 5, on moral hazard, with the limited liability model, career concerns, and common agency added to its topics. Two chapters have been completely rewritten: chapter 7, on the theory of incomplete contracts, and chapter 8, on the empirical literature in the theory of contracts. An appendix presents concepts of noncooperative game theory to supplement chapters 4 and 6. Exercises follow chapters 2 through 5. Praise for the previous edition: “The Economics of Contracts offers an excellent introduction to agency models. Written by one of the leading young researchers in contact theory, it is rigorous, clear, concise, and up-to-date. Researchers and students who want to learn about the economics of incentives will want to read this primer.”—Jean Tirole, Institut D'Économie Industrielle, Universite des Sciences Sociales, France “Students will find this a very useful introduction to the ideas of contract theory. Salanié has managed to summarize a large amount of material in a relatively short number of pages in a highly accessible and readable manner.”—Oliver Hart, Professor of Economics, Harvard University

Optimal Contracts Under Adverse Selection, Moral Hazard and Type-Dependent Reservation Utilities

Optimal Contracts Under Adverse Selection, Moral Hazard and Type-Dependent Reservation Utilities
Author: Natalie Packham
Publisher:
Total Pages: 7
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

In a continuous-time setting where a risk-averse agent controls the drift of an output process driven by a Brownian motion, optimal contracts are linear in the terminal output; this result is well-known in a setting with moral hazard and - under stronger assumptions - adverse selection. Using techniques from stochastic control theory, we show that this result continues to hold when in addition reservation utilities are type-dependent. This type of problem occurs in the study of optimal compensation problems involving competing principals.

An Introduction to the Economics of Information

An Introduction to the Economics of Information
Author: Inés Macho-Stadler
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages:
Release: 1996-10-03
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0191512079

In this revised second edition, An Introduction to the Economics of Information covers the consequences for the character and efficiency of the interaction between individuals and organizations when one party has more or better information on some aspect of the relationship. This is the condition of asymmetric information, under which the information gap will be exploited if, by doing so, the better-informed party can achieve some advantage. The book is written for a one-semester course for advanced undergraduates taking specialized course options, and for first-year postgraduate students of economics or business. After an introduction to the subject and the presentation of a benchmark model in which both parties share the same information throughout the relationship, chapters are devoted to the three main asymmetric information topics of Moral Hazard, Adverse Selection, and Signalling. The wide range of economic situations where the conclusions are applied includes such areas as finance, regulation, insurance, labour economics, health economics, and even politics. Each chapter presents the basic theory before moving on to applications and advanced topics. The problems are presented in the same framework throughout to allow easy comparison of the different results. This new edition incorporates extended exercises to test the student's understanding of the material, and to develop the tools and skills provided by the main text to solve other, original problems.