Article
The Geneva Risk and Insurance Review (2009) 34, 74–87. doi:10.1057/grir.2009.1
The Role of Repetition and Observability in Deterring Insurance Fraud
Michal Krawczyka
aFaculty of Economic Sciences, University of Warsaw, 41 Dluga 44/50 PL-00241, Warsaw, Poland. E-mail: mkrawczyk@wne.uw.edu.pl
Abstract
In this paper, I analyze an inspection game between an insurer and an infinite sequence of policyholders, who can try to misrepresent relevant information in order to obtain coverage or lower insurance premium. Because claim-auditing is costly for the insurer, ex-post moral hazard problem arises. I find that the repeated game effect serves as a commitment device, allowing the insurer to deter fraud completely (for sufficiently high discount rate) but only when the policyholders observe past auditing strategies. Under weaker observability conditions, only partial efficiency gains are generally possible. I conclude that the insurers should spend resources on signaling their anti-fraud attempts to the potential policyholders. Similar conclusions can be drawn with respect to conceptually similar problems, such as tax evasion.
Keywords:
insurance fraud, ex-post moral hazard, repeated games with short-run players
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The Role of Repetition and Observability in Deterring Insurance FraudThe Geneva Risk and Insurance Review Article



