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Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against Bad Outcomes Until this chapter, we assumed perfect information but in practice, decisions are made w/o such, i.e. under asymmetric information and uncertainty. Two issues in Chapter 6 1. how we gather and evaluate relevant information 2. Include uncertainty to Chapter 3 Consumer Choice Model. 1
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Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Dec 15, 2015

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Athena Jenney
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Page 1: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty

Chapter OutlineThe Economics Of InformationChoice Under UncertaintyInsuring Against Bad OutcomesUntil this chapter, we assumed perfect information but in practice, decisions are made w/o such, i.e. under asymmetric information and uncertainty.

Two issues in Chapter 61. how we gather and evaluate relevant information

2. Include uncertainty to Chapter 3 Consumer Choice Model.

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Page 2: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Signaling

A toad’s croak at night is a signal between potential advesaries –conveying information about its sizeSignaling: communication that conveys information.Two properties of signaling: between potential

adversaries:

1. Signals must be costly to fake (Costly-to-Fake Principle)

2. If some individuals use signals that convey favorable information about themselves, others will be forced to reveal information even when it is considerably less favorable (The Full-disclosure Principle)

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Page 3: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Costly-to-Fake Principle

Costly-to-fake principle: for a signal to an adversary to be credible, it must be costly to fake, i.e. if a small toad could costlessly imitate the deep croak of big toads, then a deep croak is no longer the characteristic of big toads. Problem: Big toads have a natural advantage - the deepness of a croak alone emerges as a reliable signal.

The Costly-to-Fake Principle has applications to signals between people in economic applications.

Economic applications:– Product Quality Assurance– Choosing a Trustworthy Employee– Choosing a Hard-Working, Smart Employee

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Page 4: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Economic Applications of the Costly-to-Fake Principle

1. Product Quality Assurance – products are so complex for the average consumer to determine the quality. To producers of high quality products who need to communicating such quality and hence charge higher prices, need to communicate via heavy advertising. The basis of such evidence that it works is that most consumers surveyed at purchase state “– as seen on TV.”

2. Choosing a Trustworthy Employee – most employees steal or cheat their employers. Solution: choose from people who belong to a certain group whose behavior is difficult to fake over a long period. For example . Recruit New York nannies who belong to a group that would find it to fake –membership of a Mormon tradition! :

3. Choosing a Hard-Working, and Smart Employee –choose graduates from an lite university and those who graduate with honors! But recall the recent story about cheating by undergraduates at Harvard. Problem – it is not clear how graduates from such institutions contribute to high productivity!

Page 5: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

The Full-Disclosure Principle

The Full-disclosure Principle-individuals must disclose even unfavorable qualities about themselves, lest their silence be taken to mean that they have something even worse to hide.Explains smaller toads croak at all since their low pitch reveals their size or inadequacy in croaking!All toads crock to keep them from appearing smaller than they really are.The Full-Disclosure principle derives from asymmetric information – a silent toad knows its size BUT the rival can only make an informed guess.

Figure 6.1: The Information Implicitin Silence

Page 6: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Applications of Costly-to-Fake Principle

Product Warranties – Producers know much more than consumers about how good their

products are. Producers of high quality products issue long and comprehensive warrants (liberal guarantees), e.g. Hyundai cars in the US. Henceforth, all Hyundai products might be deemed of credible quality.

Regulating the Employment Interviewer– Lack of evidence that something resides in a favored category will often

suggest that it belongs to a less favored one. For example, laws prohibit asking the candidate his/her marital status. Reason – prevent employers from discriminating on basis of demographic information. Problem: smart candidates volunteer this information to get into the favorable pool!

The Lemons Principle– Cars offered for sale, taken as a group, are simply of lower average quality

than cars not offered for sale. The Stigma of the Newcomer--- used to avoid ‘local bad reputation’ by

relocating. Thus, a newcomer was often viewed as having bad reputation. Those deemed trustworthy in their locale, chose to reap those rewards.

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Page 7: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Probability And Expected Value

Economic decisions made under uncertainty are essentially gambles

Expected value: the sum of all possible outcomes, weighted by its respective probability of occurrence.

– In addition to the expected value of a gamble (EV), most people also consider how they feel about each of its possible outcomes.

People choose the alternative that has the highest expected utility.– Expected utility: the expected utility of a gamble is the

expected value of utility over all possible outcomes. The expected values of the outcomes of a set of alternatives need not have

the same ranking as the expected utilities of the alternatives.

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Page 8: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Probability And Expected Value

Diminishing marginal utility: for a utility function defined on wealth, one in which the marginal utility declines as wealth rises.

Fair gamble: a gamble whose expected value is zero.

Type of Risk Preferences• Risk averse: preferences described by a utility function

with diminishing marginal utility of wealth.• Risk seeking: preferences described by a utility function

with increasing marginal utility of wealth.• Risk neutral: preferences described by a utility function

with constant marginal utility of wealth.

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Page 9: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure 6.2: A Concave Utility Function

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The Von Neumann-Morgenstern Expected Utility Model – model of choice between uncertain alternativesCentral Premise – people choose the alternative that has the highest expected utility (EU). Assume a utility function with numerical values to satisfaction associated with different outcomes. That is, the expected utility of a gamble is the expected value of utility over ALL possible outcomes.

Concave Utility function – U(M)( where M= total wealth) is concave if for any pairs of M1 and M2, the function lies above the chord that joins [M1, U(M1)] and [M2, U(M2)]

U(M) also exhibits diminishing marginal utility of wealth. People with a concave U(M) are Risk Averse – always refuse a gamble

whose EV =0 Gambles with EV =0 are termed Fair Gambles (tossing a coin)

Page 10: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure 6.3: A Risk-Averse Person Will Always Refuse a Fair Gamble

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U(M) is concave in wealth (M)

EU = ½ (18) + ½ (38) = 28 Note that 28 lies on the

chord between 18 and 32 BUT under the gamble= 40

The EU of refusing the gamble is U(40) =32 >28 = EV

It clear that a risk-averse consumer will reject not only fair gambles but even those with EV>0

For U(M), all gambles with EV wealth <52 yield lower EU than that of keeping initial wealth level at 40.

Note: The arc between A and C = EV lies above the chord AC = EU. Thus, EV between A and C lies above the EU

Losing endpoint

Winning endpoint

Page 11: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure 6.4: The Utility Function of aRisk-Seeking Person is Convex in Total

Wealth

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Page 12: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure 6.5: Risk Neutrality

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Page 13: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure 6.6: The Value of Reducing Uncertainty

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Page 14: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Risk Pooling

• Law of large numbers: a statistical law that says that if an event happens independently with probability p in each of N instances, the proportion of cases in which the event occurs approaches p as N grows larger.– Makes it possible for people to reduce

their risk exposure through pooling arrangements.

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Page 15: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard

• Adverse selection: process by which the less desirable potential trading partners volunteer to exchange.

• Moral hazard: incentives that lead people to file fraudulent claims or to be negligent in their care of goods insured against theft or damage.

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Page 16: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure 6.9: The Reservation Price

for Insurance

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Page 17: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure A6.1: A Hypothetical Uniform Wage Distribution

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Page 18: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure A6.2: The Expected Value of an Offer that is Greater than

$150

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Page 19: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure A6.3: The Acceptance Wage

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Page 20: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure A6.4: A HypotheticalPrice Distribution

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Page 21: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure A6.5: The Acceptance Price as a Function of the Cost of Search

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Page 22: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure A6.6: An Unbiased Estimate

with a Uniform Distribution

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Page 23: Chapter 6:The Economics of Information and Choice Under Uncertainty Chapter Outline The Economics Of Information Choice Under Uncertainty Insuring Against.

Figure A6.7: The Expected Valueof The Highest Estimate N = 1,2,3 &

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