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THE MARKET FOR "LEMONS": QUALITY UNCERTAINTY AND THE MARKET MECHANISM

THE MARKET FOR "LEMONS": QUALITY UNCERTAINTY AND THE MARKET MECHANISM. In The Quarterly Journal of Economics. GEORGE A. AKERLOF (1970). Some Facts About the Article. Both the  American Economic Review  and  The Review of Economic Studies  rejected the paper for " triviality "

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THE MARKET FOR "LEMONS": QUALITY UNCERTAINTY AND THE MARKET MECHANISM

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  1. THE MARKET FOR "LEMONS":QUALITY UNCERTAINTY AND THE MARKET MECHANISM In The Quarterly Journal of Economics GEORGE A. AKERLOF (1970)

  2. Some Facts About the Article • Both the American Economic Review and The Review of Economic Studies rejected the paper for "triviality" • The reviewers for Journal of Political Economy rejected it as incorrect, arguing that if this paper was correct, then no goods could be traded. • Only on the fourth attempt did the paper get published in Quarterly Journal of Economics. • The paper is one of the most-cited papers in modern economic theory (more than 5,800 citations in academic papers as of July 2009). • As of this Sunday: 14,810 citations according to Google Scholar.

  3. Structure of the Article • Establish goals • Build model – Automobile market • Applications of Model • Insurance • Employment of Minorities • Costs of dishonesty • Credit markets in developing countries • Counteracting institutions • Conclusion

  4. Goals • The paper relates quality and uncertainty • Explores interaction of quality differences and uncertainty in explaining important institutions of the labor market. • Give structure to the statement: "Business in under-developed countries is difficult” • Determining the economic costs of dishonesty • Applications: insurability; brand names, etc

  5. The Conundrum • To explain the  large price difference between new cars and those which have just left the showroom

  6. Rise of Information Asymmetry – Automobile Market • After owning a specific car for a length of time, the car owner can form a good idea of its quality. • The owner assigns a new probability to the event that his car is a lemon. • This estimate is more accurate than the original estimate. • An asymmetry in available information has developed: for the sellers now have more knowledge about the quality of a car than the buyers.

  7. Gresham’s law “Bad money drives out good.” If coins containing metal of different value have the same value as legal tender, the coins composed of the cheaper metal will be used for payment, while those made of more expensive metal will be hoarded or exported and thus tend to disappear from circulation.

  8. Model • Qd = D (p, u) • u = u (p) • S=S(p) where Qd = demand, u = average quality; p = price; s= supply • And in equilibrium the supply must equal the demand for the given average quality • S(p) = D (p, u (p))

  9. Utility Theory Economics concept that although it is impossible to measure the utility derived from a good or service, it is usually possible to rank the alternatives in their order of preference to the consumer. Since this choice is constrained by the price and the income of the consumer, the rational consumer will not spend money on an additional unit of good or service unless its marginal utility is at least equal to or greater than that of a unit of another good or service. Therefore, the price of a good or service is related to its marginal utility and the consumer will rank his or preferences accordingly.

  10. Model Building Where: M is the consumption of goods other than automobiles, xi is the quality of the ith automobile, and n is the number of automobiles Assumptions • Both type one traders and maximizers of type two traders are von Neumann-Morgenstern expected utility; • Group one has N cars with uniformly distributed quality x, 0<x <2, and group two has no cars; • The price of "other goods" M is unity.

  11. Model with Information Asymmetry Demand-Supply for group 1 Demand-Supply for group 2

  12. Model with Information Symmetry

  13. Applications

  14. Insurance • It much easier for the applicant to assess the risks involved than the insurance company. • As a result the average medical condition of insurance applicants deteriorates as the price level rises • Consequently, no insurance sales may take place at any price For males in age group of 55-64 and > 65, noninsured expenditure rises from $66 to $80 while insured expenditure declines from $105 to $70. Adverse selection

  15. Employment of Minorities • For race may serve as a good statistic for the applicant's social background, quality of schooling, and general job capabilities. • Good quality schooling could serve as a substitute for this statistic. • The certifying establishment, however, must be credible; the unreliability of slum schools decreases the economic possibilities of their students.

  16. Cost of Dishonesty • Presence of people in the market who are willing to offer inferior goods tends to drive the market out of existence. • Dishonest dealings tend to drive honest dealings out of the market. • The cost of dishonesty lies not only in the amount by which the purchaser is cheated but also the cost of loss incurred from driving legitimate business out of existence.

  17. Credit Market in Underdeveloped Countries • Managing agency system • Dominance of these managing agencies by caste • Firms establish a reputation for "honest" dealing – Monopoly rents • Use communal and possibly familial ties to encourage honest dealing within the community • Extortionate rates by local moneylender • Easy means of enforcing his contract • Personal knowledge of the character of the borrower

  18. Counteracting Institutions • Institutions arise to counteract the effects of quality uncertainty • Guarantees (risk borne by seller) • Brand name ( Quality signaling) • Chains (standardization ) • Licensing /certification (PhD, Nobel prize etc)

  19. Conclusion • The difficulty of distinguishing good quality from bad is inherent in the business world • Business suffers under such conditions of information asymmetry • Institutions emerge to address this uncertainty • Informal unwritten guarantees can aid trade

  20. Discussion Questions • Why did the article face so much resistance for publication and why has article enjoyed so much success since? • The author employs examples and anecdotes to provide the rationale for his arguments. How convinced are you with this approach?

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