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Adverse Selection: Multidimensional Asymmetric Information

Another important limitation of our analysis of adverse selection in chapter 2 is that the adverse selection parameter h was modeled as a unidimensional parameter. In many instances, the agent simultaneously knows several pieces of information that are payoff relevant and affect the optimal trade. For instance, a tax authority would like to know

10
May
Adverse Selection: Type-Dependent Participation Constraint and Countervailing Incentives

The models in sections 3.1 and 3.2 have already illustrated the difficulties that the modeler faces when there is no obvious order between the various incen- tive constraints. The same kind of difficulties arise when the agent’s participa- tion constraint is type-dependent. Indeed, those participation constraints may also perturb the natural ordering of the

10
May
Adverse Selection: Random Participation Constraint

The previous section has shown how a deterministic but type-dependent participa- tion constraint could perturb the standard results on the optimal rent extraction- efficiency trade-off. We now perturb the agent’s participation constraint in another direction, by allowing some randomness in the decision to participate. Instead of the agent’s reservation utility being perfectly known, let

10
May
Adverse Selection: Limited Liability

Sometimes the set of incentive-feasible contracts is constrained by some exogenous limits on the feasible transfers between the principal and the agent. These exoge- nous financial constraints could reveal the existence of previous financial contracts that the agent might have already signed. Those constraints will of course affect the usual rent-efficiency trade-off. A first

10
May
Adverse Selection: Audit Mechanisms and Costly State Verification
10/05/2023

Sometimes the principal would like to relax the efficient type’s incentive constraint by making it somewhat costly for him to lie and claim that he is inefficient. One important way to do so is by using an audit technology that can detect the agent’s nontruthful report and allows for some punishment when a false

Adverse Selection: Redistributive Concerns and the Efficiency-Equity Trade-Off

In the rent extraction-efficiency trade-off analyzed so far, the principal wants to minimize the information rent left to the agent for a given level of output. The principal has no redistributive concerns vis-à-vis the agent. In the optimal tax-ation literature, starting with the seminal paper of Mirrlees (1971), the principal (generally a government or

10
May
Moral Hazard: The Basic Trade-Offs

In chapter 2, we stressed that the delegation of tasks creates an information gap between the principal and his agent when the latter learns some piece of informa- tion relevant to determining the efficient volume of trade. Adverse selection is not the only informational problem one can imagine. Agents to whom a task has

10
May
Moral Hazard: The Model

1. Effort and Production  We consider an agent who can exert a costly effort e. Two possible values can be taken by e, which we normalize as a zero effort level and a positive effort of one: e  in  {0, 1}.  Exerting  effort  e  implies  a  disutility  for  the  agent  that  is  equal  to 

10
May
Moral Hazard: Risk Neutrality and First-Best Implementation

If the agent is risk-neutral, we can assume that (up to an affine transformation) u(t) = t for all t and h(u) = u for all u. The principal who wants to induce effort must thus choose the contract that solves the following problem: With risk neutrality the principal can, for instance, choose incentive compat-ible transfers

10
May
Moral Hazard: The Trade-Off Between Limited Liability Rent Extraction and Efficiency

Let us consider a risk-neutral agent. As we have already seen, (4.3) and (4.4) now take the following forms: Let us also assume that the agent’s transfer must always be greater than some exogenous level −l, with l ≥ 0. The framework is quite similar to that of section 3.5, and we refer the

11
May
Moral Hazard: The Trade-Off Between Insurance and Efficiency

Let us now turn to the second source of inefficiency in a moral hazard context— the agent’s risk aversion. When the agent is risk-averse, the principal’s program is written as: It is not obvious that kP l is a concave program for which the first-order Kuhn and Tucker conditions are necessary and sufficient. The

11
May
Moral Hazard: More than Two Levels of Performance

We now extend our previous 2 × 2 model to allow for more than two levels of performance. We consider a production process where n possible outcomes can be realized. Those performances can be ordered so that q1 < q2 < ··· < qi < ··· < qn. We denote the principal’s return in each

11
May
Moral Hazard: Informative Signals to Improve Contracting

As in the case of adverse selection analyzed in section 2.14, various verifiable signals can be used by the principal to improve the provision of incentives to the agent in a moral hazard framework. These pieces of information can be gathered by different kinds of information systems that are internal to the organization in

11
May
Moral Hazard: Moral Hazard and the Theory of the Firm

The trade-off between risk and incentives provides one possible explanation of the wage compensations used in firms.19 The widespread use of stock options for CEOs can be seen as a result of the desire of the firm’s owners to let these agents bear more risk so that they are better incentivized.20 Similarly, the use

11
May
Moral Hazard: Contract Theory at Work

This section elaborates on the moral hazard paradigm discussed so far in a number of settings that have been discussed extensively in the contracting literature. 1. Efficiency Wage  Let us consider a risk-neutral agent working for a firm, the principal. By exerting effort e in f0h 1i, the firm’s added value is V¯ (resp. V

11
May
Moral Hazard: Commitment Under Moral Hazard

The assumption of full commitment to an incentive scheme was already discussed in section 2.12 in the case of adverse selection. This issue is also quite important under moral hazard. For instance, to induce a positive effort level the principal must let the risk-averse agent bear some risk. However, once this effort is sunk,

11
May
Incentive and Participation Constraints with Moral Hazard

In chapter 4, we stressed the various conflicts that may appear in a moral hazard environment. The analysis of these conflicts, under both limited liability and risk aversion, was made easy because of our focus on a simple 2 × 2 environment with a binary effort and two levels of performance. The simple interaction

12
May
Moral Hazard: More than Two Levels of Effort

1. A Discrete Model Let us extend the model of chapter 4 by allowing more than two levels of effort. Consider the more general case, with n levels of production q1 < q2 < … < qn and K levels of effort with 0 = e0 < e1 < … < eK—1 and the

12
May
Moral Hazard: The Multitask Incentive Problem

It is often the case that the agent does not exert a single-dimensional effort, par- ticularly when he is involved in many related activities associated with the same job. Such examples abound, as we will see in section 5.2.5 below. When the agent simultaneously performs several tasks for the principal, new issues arise: How

12
May
Moral Hazard: Nonseparability of the Utility Function

The separability in transfer and effort of the agent’s utility function simplifies the principal-agent theory with moral hazard by ensuring that the agent’s participation constraint is binding. However, it neglects one significant incentive effect, namely that one way to provide incentives is to make the agents richer by decreasing their marginal disutility of effort.

12
May
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  • Management Theories
    • Industrial Organization
      • Competitive Advantage Theory
      • Contingency Theory
      • Institutional Theory
      • Evolutionary Theory of the Firm
      • Theory of Organizational Ecology
      • Behavioral Theory of the Firm
      • Resource Dependence Theory
      • Invisible Hand Theory
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      • Property Rights Theory
      • The Visible Hand
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