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Working Paper
Do We Drive More Safely When Accidents Are More Expensive? Identifying Moral Hazard from Experience Rating Schemes
RAND Journal of Economics
Author(s)
A major shortcoming of the empirical literature on asymmetric information is the inability to separately identify moral hazard from adverse selection. As a solution, Abbring et. al. (2003) suggest using dynamic insurance data to ask whether consumers have fewer claims when they are at a position in the
Date Published:
2006
Citations:
Israel, Mark. 2006. Do We Drive More Safely When Accidents Are More Expensive? Identifying Moral Hazard from Experience Rating Schemes. RAND Journal of Economics.