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Click on the button to go to the Question Click on the button to go to the problem © 2013 Pearson

Markets with Private Information 12 CLICKER QUESTIONS

Click on the button to go to the Question Click on the button to go to the problem © 2013 Pearson Question 1 Question 2 Question 3 Question 4 Question 5 Question 7 Question 8 Question 6 Question 9 Question 10 Checkpoint 12.1 Checkpoint 12.2Checkpoint 12.3

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.1 A.the buyer always has information that the seller does not have B.the seller must have information that the buyer does not have C.either the buyer or the seller has information that the other does not have D.the buyer and the seller have the same information E.the seller has more information than the seller Question 1 Asymmetric information means that ___________.

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.1 A.the price of a lemon is too high B.the price of a lemon is too low C.no lemons are bought or sold D.only lemons are bought and sold E.the price of a lemon is too high and too many lemons are traded Question 2 The lemons problem in the used car market is that ______.

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.1 A.less than; equal to B.equal to; less than C.equal to; more than D.more than; equal to E.equal to; equal to Question 3 In the used car market with a pooling equilibrium, the price of a lemon is _____ the price of a good car, and with a separating equilibrium, the price of a lemon is ______ the price of a good car.

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.1 A.only lemons are sold B.only good cars are sold C.good cars are sold at a higher price than lemons D.there is no adverse selection problem E.all cars (lemons and good cars) sell for the same price Question 4 If buyers cannot assess the quality of used cars and there are no warranties, then___________.

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.2 A.moral hazard B.adverse selection C.the lemons problem D.inefficiency in the insurance market E.a separating equilibrium Question 5 Mark is an aggressive driver so he is more likely to buy auto insurance. This situation illustrates the idea of ________.

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.2 A.signaling B.adverse selection C.moral hazard D.the cost of contracting E.a pooling equilibrium Question 6 When Sam makes an agreement and then behaves after the agreement in a way to increase his benefits and harm the other party to the agreement, Sam is illustrating ________.

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.2 A.leads to a pooling equilibrium in the insurance market B.means that an uninformed person passes knowledge to an informed person C.makes no-claim bonuses unnecessary D.explains why insurance companies offer both low-premium, high-deductible policies and high-premium, low-deductible policies. E.makes the insurance market inefficient Question 7 Screening _______.

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.3 A.patients to adopt healthier life styles B.to a separating equilibrium C.everyone to buy health insurance D.healthy people not to bother buying health insurance E.health-care providers to overtreat patients Question 8 Moral hazard in the market for health-care services leads ______.

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.3 A.young healthy people B.infectious diseases C.people who have pre-existing health conditions D.people who are employed by HMOs E.vaccinations Question 9 The missing market in the health-care market is the insurance market for _______.

© 2013 Pearson CHECKPOINT 12.3 A.are a public good; less than the B.are a public good; the C.lead to adverse selection; less than the D.have a positive externality; less than the E.have a positive externality; the Question 10 Vaccinations against infectious diseases ____, so private markets will provide _____ efficient quantity of vaccinations.