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This is often costly (like the mechanic’s fees) and not done if left to market mechanism alone. Alternatively information may be acquired to reduce the problem by either agent in the transaction. The warranty on the old car is a ‘signal’ here to the buyer. ‘Signalling’ is therefore one option to reduce the degree of asymmetry of information in the market. Buyers are likely to buy from True Value than an unknown dealer as the warranty and the name of Maruti offers some indication of the quality of the old car offered by True Value. This reassures buyers that the quality of car bought will be satisfactory. It offers a warranty to the buyer for any defect for a limited period of time from purchase date. But this comes with a cost of paying for the mechanic’s services.Įxample-True Value is a firm owned by Maruti Suzuki that sells old cars. Alternatively the agent with the less information may invest in acquiring this information by getting a check done by his mechanic. If a better used car owner offers a guarantee/warranty of some limited time, it signals the ‘good’ quality of the car to prospective buyers. One option is to allow the agent with more/better information to give some indication about the quality of the product to the agent with the lesser information. The solution to the problem of asymmetric information lies in making information available to both buyer and seller, reducing the extent of asymmetry.
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Other illustrations are found in the job market (quality of workers is better known to the employee and not employer at the time of recruitment), insurance market (where the client knows more about the probability of putting up a claim than the insurer). It happens because the information about the record of the good car is known only to the seller and not the buyer information about past records of every car is not known uniformly among buyers and sellers. This problem is called the ‘adverse selection’ problem, as the market mechanism ‘adversely/ wrongly’ selects the bad cars to be sold, while the good cars are unable to sell. The in-optimality can be seen in terms of the observation that the past record of cars sold (lemons) would be worse than the record of those cars which are not sold and driven out of the market. Society would want all cars to be sold at appropriate prices. This situation is clearly socially in optimal and inefficient. The good ones are driven out of the market by the market mechanism. In this way the market forces work to ‘adversely’ choose only the bad cars for transactions. Hence all the bad ones get sold at lower prices and the good car sellers are unable to sell and remain outside the market for used cars. Since the owners of lemons are willing to sell at a low rate and sellers of good cars are willing to sell only at a higher rate, buyers go for lower priced cars as they have no way to distinguish between good and bad cars.īuyers are only willing to pay for the ‘average’ car, which is lower than the price of a good car and higher than the price for a lemon. The better cars remain unsold as the buyers have no way of knowing which car is a good and which one is a lemon. In the market for used cars, (lemons are used cars that have a bad quality and the term was coined by ‘Akerlof’ as a classic case in the game theory literature) only the lemons are sold-implying that those used cars that have bad record are sold. The Nobel Prize winner of 2001, George Akerlof illustrated this market failure with his famous market for ‘lemons’. Information is not same with both agents, which causes the market to reach an inefficient and in optimal level of equilibrium. This asymmetric information exists when one agent has less/more knowledge than the other agent involved in the transaction. One is less/more ignorant than the other agent. The information set with both agents is unequal. This means that the information available to both agents involved in a transaction/exchange is not the same. Market Failure: Causes, Types, Example and Government’s Role! Types of Market Failures: Asymmetric Information :Īs the name suggests, there is asymmetry or lack of symmetry (or equality) in the information with to all economic agents who are part of a market.