Information asymmetry | Secrets and Agents. George Akerlof's 1970 paper, 'The Market for Lemons,' is a foundation stone of information economics. The first in our series on seminal economic ideas. Economist, July 23, 2016.
http://www.economist.com/news/ec ... n-stone-information
Note:
(a) "IN 2007 the state of Washington introduced a new rule aimed at making the labour market fairer: firms were banned from checking job applicants' credit scores. * * * Since then, ten other states have followed suit. But when Robert Clifford and Daniel Shoag, two economists, recently studied the bans, they found that the laws left blacks and the young with fewer jobs, not more. * * * Messrs Clifford and Shoag found that when firms could no longer access credit scores, they put more weight on other signals, like education and experience. Because these are rarer among disadvantaged groups, it became harder, not easier, for them to convince employers of their worth. Signalling explains all kinds of behaviour."
Robert Clifford and Daniel Shoag, 'No More Credit Score': Employer Credit Check Bans and Signal Substitution. Social Science Research Network, Feb 15, 2016 (HKS Working Paper No. RWP16-008)
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2746642
(i) Social Science Research Network
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Science_Research_Network
(SSRN)
(ii) HKS stands for Harvard Kennedy School, employer of Shoag, the corresponding author.
(b) "in the late 1960s, George Akerlof wrote 'The Market for Lemons' * * * and later won its author a Nobel prize * * * Mr Akerlof's idea, eventually published in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1970, was at once simple and revolutionary."
(i) George Akerlof
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Akerlof
(1940- )
(ii) George A Akerlof, The Market for Lemons: Quality uncertainty and the market mechanism. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 84: 488-500 (1970).
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1879431?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
(c) " 'peaches' * * * 'lemon' * * * 'information asymmetry' * * * Is it really true that you can win a Nobel prize just for observing that some people in markets know more than others? That was the question one journalist asked of Michael Spence, who, along with Mr Akerlof and Joseph Stiglitz, was a joint recipient of the 2001 Nobel award for their work on information asymmetry. His [journalist's] incredulity was understandable.
(i) lemon
Online Etymology Dictionary
www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=lemon
(ii) My Web search suggests Akerlof coined the term "peach" -- nobody else talks about cars as peaches but him.
(iii) Another way to look at Akerlof's findings is
Lemons Problem. Investopedia, undated
www.investopedia.com/terms/l/lemons-problem.asp
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