The Basics
- Simple definition: When having insurance or protection changes behavior, making the insured event more likely.
- Core idea: People take more risks when they don’t bear the full consequences.
- Think of it as: Driving more recklessly because you have comprehensive insurance.
What It Actually Means
Moral hazard occurs after a transaction when one party’s actions are hidden. Insurance encourages risk-taking – insured drivers may be less careful, and insured businesses may take more chances. In finance, banks guaranteed against failure may take excessive risks. In employment, workers with guaranteed jobs may shirk. Solutions include co-payments, deductibles, monitoring, performance incentives, and regulation.
Example
A Pakistani factory with fire insurance might skimp on fire safety (fewer extinguishers, ignoring hazards). The insurer bears the cost if fire occurs – moral hazard. Insurers require safety inspections and impose deductibles to reduce this.
Why It Matters (2026)
Moral hazard is central to debates about bank bailouts (too big to fail), health insurance, and executive compensation. Understanding it helps design better contracts and policies.
Don’t Confuse With
Adverse Selection – moral hazard is hidden actions after; adverse selection is hidden characteristics before.
See also
Asymmetric Information • Adverse Selection • Principal-Agent Problem • Insurance • Risk
Read more about this with MASEconomics: