1 / 17

Intermediation, Compensation and Tacit Collusion in Insurance Markets

Andreas Richter Ludwig-Maximilians-University Muinch. Intermediation, Compensation and Tacit Collusion in Insurance Markets. Uwe Focht University of Hamburg. Jörg Schiller WHU – Otto Beisheim School of Management. ARIA Annual Meeting Washington 2006. Agenda. Introduction Model Framework

lee-rocha
Télécharger la présentation

Intermediation, Compensation and Tacit Collusion in Insurance Markets

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Andreas Richter Ludwig-Maximilians-University Muinch Intermediation, Compensation and Tacit Collusion in Insurance Markets Uwe Focht University of Hamburg Jörg Schiller WHU – Otto Beisheim School of Management ARIA Annual Meeting Washington 2006

  2. Agenda • Introduction • Model Framework • Market without Intermediation • Market with Intermediation • Fee-for-Advice • Commission • Collusion and Intermediation • Concluding Remarks

  3. Collusive Behavior in German Commercial Insurance • In 2005, the German Federal Cartel Office imposed a 150 Million Euro fine against 17 leading commercial insurance companies. • From 1999 to 2002 insurance companies established a cartel in order to enforce higher premiums as a “reorganization measure”. • In particular, they agreed to • Increase premiums and deductibles • Waive premium reductions • Unify terms and conditions • Enforcement measures for the cartel • Insurers: Exclusion from pool solutions • Brokers: Termination of cooperation

  4. Main focus • Why is collusive behavior in commercial insurance a common phenomenon? • What is the specific role of an insurance broker in this context? • To what extent does the broker’s compensation affect pricing and collusive behavior of insurance companies?

  5. Model Framework (I) • Insurance market with heterogeneous risk profiles and differentiated products (Schultz, 2004). • Consumers’ risk profiles are uniformly distributed in [0,1]. • Two insurers (i = 0,1) offer policies at the two extremes of the risk profile space and compete in premiums pi. • Constant marginal costs c.

  6. Model Framework (II) • Willingness to pay v for consumers is sufficiently large. • In equilibrium the market is completely covered. • Disutility of mismatch t·, increases linearly in the distance to the demanded product. • Two types of consumers: • Informed consumers with fraction (0,1] are perfectly informed about their risk profile and the premiums pi; • Uninformed consumers with fraction (1−)only form rational expectations regarding their risk profile and premiums pi.

  7. Market without Intermediation Sequence of play: • Insurers simultaneously offer contracts at premiums pi. • Consumers decide whether and where to purchase an insurance policy. • In the symmetric subgame perfect Nash equilibrium prices and profits are and • Both premium level and profits decline in the fraction of informed consumers. • One half of the uninformed consumers match with the wrong product • Resulting welfare loss:

  8. Market with Intermediation • The broker is endowed with an information technology which perfectly reveals the risk profile of an individual consumer. • Cost per risk analysis . • Two compensation systems are considered: • Broker is paid by the insured (fee-for-advice) • Broker is paid by the insurance company (commission) • The broker acts completely non-strategic!

  9. Market with Intermediation (Fee-for-Advice) • Broker‘s fee at which uninformed consumers are indifferent • If k≤ (1/4)tholds, the broker offers risk analyses and all uninformed consumers purchase this service. • Thus, since = 1, equilibrium premiums and profits are and

  10. Market with Intermediation (Commission) • The risk analysis service does not cause any costs for uninformed consumers, therefore = 1. • Broker’s commission at which insurers are indifferent • Insurance companies accept offer and charge the premiums and • The resulting insurer profit is:

  11. Fee-for-Advice vs. Commisson System • From a social planner‘s point of view both remuneration systems are equivalent. • But: In a modified model there might be incentives for a broker to match uninformed consumers with the wrong insurance company (intentional mismatch). • In both cases, due to the increased transparency on the consumer side, the insurers’ profits decrease. • Greater incentives for collusion

  12. Collusion (I) • Assumption: Insurance companies jointly decide upon premium offers and the broker’s remuneration. • The coalition maximizes its joint profit subject to the broker’s participation constraint . • In our model, rationing is not profitable for the cartel. • A commission system is superior to a fee-for-advice system. • Prices can not be differentiated in a fee-for-advice system. • A fee reduces the maximum possible premium, since

  13. Collusion (II) • The broker is compensated by a break even commission. • The profit maximizing premium for the cartel is: • In our model, collusion does not affect social welfare (no rationing) • There is (just) a redistribution of income.

  14. Concluding Remarks • In markets with uninformed consumers and heterogeneous risk profiles, intermediation has the potential to improve social welfare. • Intermediation reduces the market power as well as profits of insurance companies and increases collusion incentives. • In a competitive market both remuneration systems are equivalent. • Under collusion • a fee for advice limits the insurers‘ opportunities to extract rents from informed consumers. • less differentiated products are offered (→ in the paper). • In our analysis we do not examine the broker’s incentive problem.

  15. Backup

  16. Product Differentiation Without collusion: • Insurance companies maximize profits by offering differentiated products outside at: • Product differentiation increases consumers’ disutility of mismatching and negatively affects social welfare. In the case of collusion: • Profit maximizing product characteristics are: • In order to maximize the coalition’s joint profit, insurance companies equalize product characteristics.

  17. Rationing • Rationing is only profitable, if and only if • Collusion is profitable, if and only if • The coalition’s joint profit under collusion is strictly higher without any rationing!

More Related