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Mishkin Eakins - Financial Markets and Institutions, 7e (2012)

problem. The free-rider problem occurs when people who do not pay for informa-

tion take advantage of the information that other people have paid for. The free-rider

problem suggests that the private sale of information will be only a partial solution to

the lemons problem. To see why, suppose that you have just purchased information

that tells you which firms are good and which are bad. You believe that this purchase

is worthwhile because you can make up the cost of acquiring this information, and then




142

Part 3 Fundamentals of Financial Institutions

some, by purchasing the securities of good firms that are undervalued. However,

when our savvy (free-riding) investor Irving sees you buying certain securities, he

buys right along with you, even though he has not paid for any information. If many

other investors act as Irving does, the increased demand for the undervalued good

securities will cause their low price to be bid up immediately to reflect the securi-

ties’ true value. Because of all these free riders, you can no longer buy the securi-

ties for less than their true value. Now because you will not gain any profits from

purchasing the information, you realize that you never should have paid for this infor-

mation in the first place. If other investors come to the same realization, private firms

and individuals may not be able to sell enough of this information to make it worth

their while to gather and produce it. The weakened ability of private firms to profit

from selling information will mean that less information is produced in the market-

place, so adverse selection (the lemons problem) will still interfere with the effi-

cient functioning of securities markets.

Government Regulation to Increase Information

The free-rider problem prevents

the private market from producing enough information to eliminate all the asymmet-

ric information that leads to adverse selection. Could financial markets benefit from

government intervention? The government could, for instance, produce information

to help investors distinguish good from bad firms and provide it to the public free of

charge. This solution, however, would involve the government in releasing negative

information about firms, a practice that might be politically difficult. A second pos-

sibility (and one followed by the United States and most governments throughout

the world) is for the government to regulate securities markets in a way that encour-

ages firms to reveal honest information about themselves so that investors can deter-

mine how good or bad the firms are. In the United States, the Securities and Exchange

Commission (SEC) is the government agency that requires firms selling their secu-

rities to have independent audits, in which accounting firms certify that the firm is

adhering to standard accounting principles and disclosing accurate information about

sales, assets, and earnings. Similar regulations are found in other countries. However,

disclosure requirements do not always work well, as the recent collapse of Enron

and accounting scandals at other corporations, such as WorldCom and Parmalat (an

Italian company) suggest (see the Mini-Case box, “The Enron Implosion”).

The asymmetric information problem of adverse selection in financial markets

helps explain why financial markets are among the most heavily regulated sectors

in the economy (fact 5). Government regulation to increase information for investors

is needed to reduce the adverse selection problem, which interferes with the efficient

functioning of securities (stock and bond) markets.

Although government regulation lessens the adverse selection problem, it does

not eliminate it. Even when firms provide information to the public about their sales,

assets, or earnings, they still have more information than investors: There is a lot more

to knowing the quality of a firm than statistics can provide. Furthermore, bad firms

have an incentive to make themselves look like good firms, because this would enable

them to fetch a higher price for their securities. Bad firms will slant the informa-

tion they are required to transmit to the public, thus making it harder for investors

to sort out the good firms from the bad.

Financial Intermediation

So far we have seen that private production of informa-

tion and government regulation to encourage provision of information lessen, but

do not eliminate, the adverse selection problem in financial markets. How, then, can

the financial structure help promote the flow of funds to people with productive



Chapter 7 Why Do Financial Institutions Exist?

143

investment opportunities when there is asymmetric information? A clue is provided

by the structure of the used-car market.

An important feature of the used-car market is that most used cars are not sold

directly by one individual to another. An individual considering buying a used car

might pay for privately produced information by subscribing to a magazine like



Consumer Reports to find out if a particular make of car has a good repair record.

Nevertheless, reading Consumer Reports does not solve the adverse selection prob-

lem, because even if a particular make of car has a good reputation, the specific car

someone is trying to sell could be a lemon. The prospective buyer might also bring

the used car to a mechanic for an inspection. But what if the prospective buyer 

doesn’t know a mechanic who can be trusted or if the mechanic would charge a

high fee to evaluate the car?

Because these roadblocks make it hard for individuals to acquire enough infor-

mation about used cars, most used cars are not sold directly by one individual to

another. Instead, they are sold by an intermediary, a used-car dealer who purchases

used cars from individuals and resells them to other individuals. Used-car dealers

produce information in the market by becoming experts in determining whether a

car is a peach or a lemon. Once they know that a car is good, they can sell it with

some form of a guarantee: either a guarantee that is explicit, such as a warranty,

or an implicit guarantee, in which they stand by their reputation for honesty. People

are more likely to purchase a used car because of a dealer’s guarantee, and the dealer

is able to make a profit on the production of information about automobile quality

by being able to sell the used car at a higher price than the dealer paid for it. If

dealers purchase and then resell cars on which they have produced information, they

avoid the problem of other people free-riding on the information they produced.

M I N I - C A S E


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