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| asymmetric information | |
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Akerlof, Michael Spence , and Joseph Stiglitz jointly received the Nobel Prize In Economics in 2001 for their research related to asymmetric information. ASYMMETRICAL INFORMATION The paper by Akerlof describes how the interaction between quality heterogeneity and Asymmetrical Information can lead to the disappearance of a market where guarantees are indefinite. In this model, as quality is undistinguishable beforehand by the buyer (due to the asymmetry of information), incentives exist for the seller to pass off a low-quality good as a higher-quality one. The buyer, however, takes this incentive into consideration, and takes the quality of the good to be uncertain. Only the average quality of the good will be considered, which in turn will have the side effect that goods that are above average in terms of quality will be driven out of the market. This mechanism is repeated until a no-trade equilibrium is reached. As a consequence of the mechanism described in this paper, markets may fail to exist altogether in certain situations involving quality uncertainty. Examples include the market for used cars, the dearth of formal credit markets in developing countries and the unavailability of health insurance for the elderly (that is, in the absence of government programs such as Medicare ). However, not all players in a given market will follow the same rules or have the same aptitude of assessing quality. So there will always be a distinct advantage for some vendors to offer low-quality goods to the less-informed segment of a market that, on the whole, appears to be of reasonable quality and have reasonable guarantees of certainty. This is part of the basis for the idiom, Buyer Beware . Ironically, there is no reciprocal danger of a market for a good product collapsing in this manner when the asymmetry is in favour of the buyer, that is to say, when the buyers can assess more accurately the quality of the products than the sellers. In this case, regular market forces of supply and demand will prevail, the sellers will get the highest price paid, and the trend will be to weed out products with prices in excess of their quality. This is likely the basis for the idiom that an Informed Consumer is a better consumer. An example of this might be the subjective quality of fine food and wines (beyond just safety and freshness issues). Individual consumers know best what they prefer to eat, and quality is almost always assessed in fine establishments by smell and taste before they pay. However, a definition of 'highest quality' for food and wine eludes providers. Thus, a large variety of better quality and higher priced restaurants are supported. USED CARS: A "LEMONS MARKET" Akerlof's paper uses the Market for used Car s as an example of the problem of quality uncertainty. There are good used cars and defective used cars ("lemons"). The buyer of a car does not know beforehand whether it is a good car or a lemon. So the buyer's best guess for a given car is that the car is of average quality; accordingly, he/she will be willing to pay for it only the price of a car of known average quality. This means that the owner of a good used car will be unable to get a high enough price to make selling that car worthwhile. Therefore, owners of good cars will not place their cars on the used car market. The withdrawal of good cars reduces the average quality of cars on the market, causing buyers to revise downward their expectations for any given car. This, in turn, motivates the owners of moderately good cars not to sell, and so on. The result is that a market in which there is Asymmetrical Information with respect to quality shows characteristics similar to those described by Gresham's Law : the bad drives out the good.
George E. Hoffer and Michael D. Pratt state that the “economic literature is divided on whether a lemons market actually exists in used vehicles." The authors’ research supports the hypothesis that “known defects provisions,” used by US states (e.g., Wisconsin) to regulate used car sales have been ineffectual, because the quality of used vehicles sold in these states is not significantly better quality than the vehicles in neighboring states without such consumer protection legislation. George E. Hoffer and Michael D. Pratt. Used vehicles, lemons markets, and Used Car Rules: Some empirical evidence. Journal of Consumer Policy. Springer Netherlands, Volume 10, Number 4 / December, 1987 The term " Lemon ", in connection with cars, did not enter the language of economics as a result of this paper. Rather, it came from a "Lemon" Volkswagen advertisement from the 1960s. Volkswagen Lemon ad , University of Iowa CRITERIA FOR A LEMON MARKET # Asymmetry of information
# An incentive exists for the seller to pass off a low quality product as a higher quality one # Sellers have no credible disclosure technology (sellers with a great car have no way to credibly disclose this to buyers) # Deficiency of ''effective'' public quality assurances (by reputation or regulation) # Deficiency of ''effective'' guarantees / warranties OTHER "LEMONS MARKETS" There are other markets where buyers face the problem of quality uncertainty and information asymmetry. In reality, no existing market can be accurately described as a complete lemon market, because if the above criteria were met entirely, the market would not exist. In reality, any market might exhibit a trend towards decreased quality and decreased sale value, due to the lemon market principle, if the consumer is less informed and empowered than the seller. Below are described some of the worst-case scenarios where markets fail to exist or have demonstrated extremely low quality products due to uncertainty. Milk in India in the 1970s In India in the 1970s, good quality, fresh milk was rarely available, because so many merchants watered down their milk to increase their profits. Since buyers could not assess the milk’s butterfat content, the low-quality milk drove out the high-quality milk. The Indian National Dairy Development Board provided machines to measure butterfat content and created brand names to build buyers' trust in the milk they were buying. As a result, the quality of milk available in India improved.http://faculty-gsb.stanford.edu/mcmillan/personal_page/documents/Market%20Institutions.pdf. LEMON LAWS IN THE UNITED STATES The United States has a federal lemon law (the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act ) that protects citizens of all states. There are also state laws regarding lemons which vary by state and may not necessarily cover used or leased vehicles. The rights afforded to consumers by lemon laws may exceed the warranties expressed in purchase contracts. These state laws provide remedies to consumers for automobiles that repeatedly fail to meet certain standards of quality and performance. Lemon Law is the common nickname for these laws, but each state has different names for the laws and acts, which may also cover more than just automobiles. In California and federal law, "Lemon Laws" cover anything mechanical, including a toaster. The federal lemon law also provides the warrantor may be obligated to pay your attorney fees if you prevail in a lemon law suit, as do most state lemon laws. If a car has to be repaired for the same defect four or more times and the problem is still occurring, the car may be deemed to be "a lemon." The defect must substantially hinder the vehicle's use, value or safety. Purchasers who knowingly purchase a car in "as is" condition accept the defects and void their rights under the lemon law. REFERENCE stable link: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0033-5533%28197008%2984%3A3%3C488%3ATMF%22QU%3E2.0.CO%3B2-6 SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
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