Chapter 9
An article in the Economist magazine observes: "Insurance companies often suspect the only people who buy insurance are the ones most likely to collect." Source: "The Money Talks," Economist, December 5, 2008. What do economists call the problem being described here?
Adverse selection.
The author of a newspaper article providing advice to renters observes that "landlords will always know more than you do." Source: Marc Santora, "How to Be a Brainy Renter," New York Times, June 3, 2010. Part 2 Do you agree with this statement? If so, what do landlords know that potential renters might not?
Agree; Landlords know more about the quality of the property, and hence its true value, than renters.
In what ways is the market for rental apartments like the market for used cars?
In both markets, the owner knows more than the potential renter or buyer.
If we lived in a world in which everyone was perfectly honest, would the difference in the transactions costs faced by financial intermediaries when they make loans and those faced by small savers when they make loans disappear?
No; while information costs might decrease there are still significant legal and other transaction costs involved in matching savers and borrowers.
What is the most important method of debt financing for corporations?
The bond market.
What is the most important source of funds for small to medium-sized firms?
The owners' personal funds and profits
Why don't these firms rely on external funds to the same extent as large firms do?
Transactions costs and information costs are much higher for smaller firms.
If everyone were perfectly honest, would there be a role for financial intermediaries?
Yes
Financial intermediaries take advantage of _____, which refers to the _____ in average cost that results from _____ in the volume of a good or a service produced.
economies of scale; reduction; an increase
If insurance companies are correct in their suspicion, it will increase the price of insurance.
increase
The shift to keeping all records on computers has increased the opportunities to achieve economies of scale by replacing labor cost with technology cost.
increased; labor; technology
Describe some of the information problems in the financial system that lead firms to rely more heavily on internal funds than external funds to finance their growth. Do these information problems imply that firms are able to spend less on expansion than is economically optimal?
Asymmetric information makes information costs for external funds higher than for internal funds, but these costs do not necessarily imply that firms are able to spend less on expansion than is economically optimal.
If the article is correct about what was happening in the Chinese banking system, what problems might arise as a result?
Banks will make riskier and riskier loans over time.
Which of the following is a correctly explained key feature of the financial system? (Check all that apply.)
Debt contracts usually require collateral or restrictive covenants. The purpose of the collateral is to reduce moral hazard. The stock market is a less important source of external funds to corporations than is the bond market. This is because there is less moral hazard involved with bonds than with stocks. Loans from financial intermediaries are the most important external source of funds for small- to medium-sized firms. Financial intermediaries can reduce the transaction costs of borrowing for small firms.
If the statement is correct, what are the implications for the market for rental apartments?
Landlords will attempt to charge a higher price than they otherwise would receive in the absence of this information asymmetry.
What is the most important source of external funds for these firms?
Loans from financial intermediaries
In what ways is it different?
The landlord is not selling the apartment, merely renting it, while the buyer of a used car makes an irreversible deal.
Consider the possibility of income insurance. With income insurance, if a person loses his job or doesn't get as big a raise as anticipated, he would be compensated under his insurance coverage. Why don't insurance companies offer income insurance of this type? (Check all that apply.)
The problem is moral hazard (once insured, you won't work as hard). The problem is adverse selection (people who are more likely to be fired or get low raises would be more likely to buy such insurance).
An article in the Wall Street Journal discussed the fact that the Chinese government often intervenes to keep banks that make many bad loans from failing. The result was "moral hazard, or risk-taking based on the belief that someone else will pick up the tab if things go wrong." Do you agree with the article's definition of moral hazard in this context? This is an example of moral hazard because the article mentions that the government often intervenes to bail out banks making bad loans, therefore, banks are taking risks knowing they will not bear the entire burden when loans fail
is an example; taking risks knowing they will not bear the entire burden when loans fail
At the time, banks achieved little economies of scale as the amount of labor required to maintain such records was the same for every transaction, regardless of the size of the bank.
little; the same; regardless