I conduct inference on moral hazard in the Italian automobile insurance market. I disentangle moral hazard from adverse selection and state dependence by exploiting the nonlinearities in the penalties across driving records and companies, and a discontinuity in the cost of accidents in the last 60 days of the contractual year. I employ a unique matched insurer-insuree panel dataset, containing rich information on 4,316,647 auto insurance contracts underwritten by all Italian insurers. The results demonstrate that moral hazard is a pervasive feature of the market, although its magnitude varies across companies.

More on this topic

BFI Working Paper·Mar 10, 2025

The Curious Surge of Productivity in U.S. Restaurants

Austan Goolsbee, Chad Syverson, Rebecca Goldgof, and Joe Tatarka
Topics: COVID-19, Employment & Wages, Industrial Organization
BFI Working Paper·Mar 3, 2025

Venture Capital Start-up Selection

Young Soo Jang and Steven Neil Kaplan
Topics: Financial Markets
BFI Working Paper·Feb 17, 2025

A Comprehensive GIS Database for China’s Surface Transport Network with Implications for Transport and Socioeconomics Research

Steven J. Davis, Meijun Qian, and Wen Zeng
Topics: Industrial Organization